DataMiner is the xOps platform built for the Intelligence Era. It unifies data, systems, and workflows across your operational ecosystem — bridging complex infrastructure and automated intelligence to give you real-time visibility and control across your entire operation.
DataMiner turns complex operations into intelligent ecosystems for:
deployed by leading corporations in over 125 countries worldwide Read our customer stories
Because digital transformation is not a goal by itself, it is a means to an end. It is about making the transition from the digital era to the now quickly emerging data-driven era. It is a transformation, not an evolution. It is about a caterpillar transforming into a butterfly, and to excel at thriving in an entirely new data-driven world.
Because that’s eventually what it is all about. Everything revolves about running your ecosystem better, faster and cheaper. And in the new quickly emerging data-driven era, it all boils down to leveraging data and controls easily, efficiently and securely.
If you loved the show for the emotional core of Hiro and Zero Two, you might cry at the ending. That’s valid. The feeling is there, even if the writing isn’t.
Here’s a long, critical review of Darling in the FranXX Episode 24, written for someone who’s just finished the series and is trying to process the finale. Ambition Without Altitude: Why Episode 24 Crumbled Under Its Own Weight
The tone is all over the place. One moment, we are having a quiet, philosophical conversation about memories. The next, we are watching a 200-foot-tall Zero Two fist-fight a planet. Then, we cut to a wedding. Then, Hiro and Zero Two literally evaporate into stardust. The episode has no breathing room. It’s moving so fast to cover the plot that it forgets to let the audience feel anything besides confusion. The Ugly (The Thematic Betrayal) Here is my biggest gripe with Episode 24: it betrays the show’s best theme.
The first ten minutes, before the plot descends into chaos, are genuinely affecting. Hiro and Zero Two’s souls drifting through space, their memories unraveling like film reels, is a stunningly directed sequence. The shot of young Hiro reaching out to the picture book, juxtaposed with Zero Two’s hand fading, lands an emotional punch that the rest of the episode fails to support. You can feel the animators fighting for their lives to make you cry.
key features of DataMiner
With DataMiner in place, you are equipped to operate with unmatched efficiency and agility, thriving as a fully digitized organization.
complete freedom to innovate
DataMiner Functions make it easy to create powerful solutions by cherry-picking the building blocks you need.
Allowing you to continuously evolve on the fly and provide maximum value for your organization.
Discover all DataMiner FunctionsCatch a first glimpse of DataMiner and see for yourself why it's the leading NMS/OSS solution for the ICT media and broadband industry!
you're in good company
If you loved the show for the emotional core of Hiro and Zero Two, you might cry at the ending. That’s valid. The feeling is there, even if the writing isn’t. Darling in the FranXX Episode 24
Here’s a long, critical review of Darling in the FranXX Episode 24, written for someone who’s just finished the series and is trying to process the finale. Ambition Without Altitude: Why Episode 24 Crumbled Under Its Own Weight If you loved the show for the emotional
The tone is all over the place. One moment, we are having a quiet, philosophical conversation about memories. The next, we are watching a 200-foot-tall Zero Two fist-fight a planet. Then, we cut to a wedding. Then, Hiro and Zero Two literally evaporate into stardust. The episode has no breathing room. It’s moving so fast to cover the plot that it forgets to let the audience feel anything besides confusion. The Ugly (The Thematic Betrayal) Here is my biggest gripe with Episode 24: it betrays the show’s best theme. Here’s a long, critical review of Darling in
The first ten minutes, before the plot descends into chaos, are genuinely affecting. Hiro and Zero Two’s souls drifting through space, their memories unraveling like film reels, is a stunningly directed sequence. The shot of young Hiro reaching out to the picture book, juxtaposed with Zero Two’s hand fading, lands an emotional punch that the rest of the episode fails to support. You can feel the animators fighting for their lives to make you cry.
DataMiner is a proven technology, with an unrivaled catalog of 7000+ connectors for products from over 1000 different vendors.
It’s the fastest growing collection of integrations, trusted by thousands of media and broadband companies worldwide and endorsed by leading tech vendors.