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Tesla prices standard Model Y at $41,700 in Norway, its website shows – Reuters
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CrowdStrike Named a SIEM Visionary in 2025 Gartner® Magic Quadrant™
AUSTIN, Texas – October 9, 2025 – CrowdStrike (NASDAQ: CRWD) today announced it has been recognized as a Visionary in the 2025 Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for Security Information and Event Management (SIEM). We believe this recognition demonstrates CrowdStrike’s expertise in reimagining SIEM with AI, real-time data, and a unified platform approach.
Falcon® Next-Gen SIEM is driving adoption of the Falcon® platform as the operating system of cybersecurity. Organizations are leveraging its native, hyper-scalable data foundation to solve their most complex security and IT problems, replacing legacy SIEMs that are plagued by poor data ingestion and limited retention, complex workflows, delayed searches, and high costs. By unifying native Falcon and third-party data with AI-driven automation and real-time intelligence, Falcon Next-Gen SIEM unlocks new capabilities, cost efficiencies, and agentic speed, reducing complexity while delivering the scale and responsiveness modern defenders require.
“Legacy SIEM has failed to keep pace with evolving threats and the scale of enterprise data,” said Ajit Sancheti, general manager, Falcon Next-Gen SIEM, CrowdStrike. “Falcon Next-Gen SIEM is the engine of the agentic SOC, delivering the automation, speed, and control to transform SOC operations. Combined with our acquisition of Onum and relentless AI innovation, Falcon Next-Gen SIEM sets a new standard for how data drives modern security.”
Innovation Driving the Agentic SOC
The addition of Onum’s real-time streaming technology supercharges Falcon Next-Gen SIEM, eliminating data migration friction and the need for third-party tools. By bringing AI-powered detections directly to third-party data sources through in-pipeline analysis, Onum reduces data storage costs by up to 50 percent while delivering 70 percent faster incident response with 40 percent less ingestion overhead. And with enriched, real-time streams directly to AI agents, Onum immediately boosts the efficacy of Falcon agentic innovations and customers’ wider ecosystem.As part of its Agentic Security Workforce announced at Fal.Con 2025 in September, CrowdStrike unveiled new mission-ready agents within Falcon Next-Gen SIEM that will automate high-friction tasks so humans can focus on strategy, judgment, and commanding outcomes. These agents perform search analysis, correlation rule generation, data transformation, and workflow generation. With Onum and continuous AI innovation, Falcon Next-Gen SIEM sets a new standard for what organizations expect from their SIEM.
To learn more about CrowdStrike’s recognition in the 2025 Gartner® Magic Quadrant™ for Security Information and Event Management (SIEM), please read our blog.
GARTNER is a registered trademark and service mark of Gartner and Magic Quadrant is a registered trademark of Gartner, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the U.S. and internationally and are used herein with permission. All rights reserved. Gartner does not endorse any vendor, product or service depicted in its research publications, and does not advise technology users to select only those vendors with the highest ratings or other designation. Gartner research publications consist of the opinions of Gartner’s research organization and should not be construed as statements of fact. Gartner disclaims all warranties, expressed or implied, with respect to this research, including any warranties of merchantability or fitness for a particular purpose.
About CrowdStrike
CrowdStrike (NASDAQ: CRWD), a global cybersecurity leader, has redefined modern security with the world’s most advanced cloud-native platform for protecting critical areas of enterprise risk – endpoints and cloud workloads, identity and data.Powered by the CrowdStrike Security Cloud and world-class AI, the CrowdStrike Falcon® platform leverages real-time indicators of attack, threat intelligence, evolving adversary tradecraft and enriched telemetry from across the enterprise to deliver hyper-accurate detections, automated protection and remediation, elite threat hunting and prioritized observability of vulnerabilities.
Purpose-built in the cloud with a single lightweight-agent architecture, the Falcon platform delivers rapid and scalable deployment, superior protection and performance, reduced complexity and immediate time-to-value.
CrowdStrike: We stop breaches.
Learn more: https://www.crowdstrike.com/
Follow us: Blog | X | LinkedIn | Instagram
Start a free trial today: https://www.crowdstrike.com/trial© 2025 CrowdStrike, Inc. All rights reserved. CrowdStrike and CrowdStrike Falcon are marks owned by CrowdStrike, Inc. and are registered in the United States and other countries. CrowdStrike owns other trademarks and service marks and may use the brands of third parties to identify their products and services.
Media Contact
Jake Schuster
CrowdStrike Corporate Communications
press@crowdstrike.com
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How confident are Americans in doing practical tasks?
(timnewman/Getty Images) Most Americans express confidence in their ability to do various practical tasks, according to a recent Pew Research Center survey.
The survey asked Americans if they felt they could do each of 12 activities, ranging from everyday household tasks to ones that require more technical knowledge.
Most Americans say they can do certain tasks related to health and food:
- 94% of U.S. adults say they definitely or probably would be able to clean and care for a wound.
- 88% say they would be able to make sense of nutrition labels.
- 83% say they could explain what yeast does in baking bread.
- 83% say they could grow a vegetable garden.
Most Americans also are confident in their ability to do certain household tasks:
- 95% of adults say they definitely or probably would be able to remove a stain from their clothes.
- 76% say they would understand which chemicals not to mix in household cleaning.
- 69% say they would be able to weatherproof doors and windows.
Most Americans also say they definitely or probably would be able to understand charts and tables in a news article (87%), calculate the amount to tip in their head (86%) or navigate using a compass (76%).
Americans are much less confident in their ability to do other tasks that require more specialized knowledge. Fewer than half say they definitely or probably would be able to explain a high-pressure system on a weather map (39%) or fix a problem with a car’s engine (29%).
How confidence varies by education
Americans with more education are more likely than those with less education to say they would be able to make sense of numerical information and do math in their head. Still, large majorities across all educational groups say they would be able to do these things.
The pattern is reversed when it comes to fixing a problem with a car’s engine: Americans without a college degree are more likely than those with a degree to say they definitely or probably would be able to do this.
How confidence varies by gender
Men and women often take on different roles in households and practical tasks. And men are more likely than women to say they would be able to do some of the tasks we asked about.
- The largest gender gap concerns fixing a car’s engine: 45% of men say they definitely or probably would be able to do this, compared with 14% of women.
- Men are also much more likely than women to say they’d be able to navigate using a compass outdoors (86% vs. 66%), weatherproof doors and windows (78% vs. 60%), and explain a high-pressure system on a weather map (47% vs. 30%).
- There are only small gender differences in other tasks we asked about. For example, similar majorities of men and women say they would be able to calculate the amount to tip in their head or make sense of nutrition labels.
How confidence varies by age
Majorities of younger adults say they could do most of the tasks we asked about – though sometimes at lower rates than older Americans.
For example, 51% of adults under 30 say they definitely or probably would be able to weatherproof doors and windows, compared with much larger shares of older adults.
Also, 77% of adults under 30 say they would be able to calculate a tip in their head, compared with nine-in-ten ages 50 and older.
Related: Tipping Culture in America: Public Sees a Changed Landscape
Note: Here are the questions used for this analysis, the topline and the survey methodology.
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