惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

酷 壳 – CoolShell
酷 壳 – CoolShell
GbyAI
GbyAI
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
Project Zero
Project Zero
C
Cisco Blogs
Simon Willison's Weblog
Simon Willison's Weblog
P
Privacy International News Feed
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
A
Arctic Wolf
Security Latest
Security Latest
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
Threat Intelligence Blog | Flashpoint
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
Apple Machine Learning Research
Apple Machine Learning Research
T
Tailwind CSS Blog
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
T
Tenable Blog
雷峰网
雷峰网
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
V
V2EX
C
CXSECURITY Database RSS Feed - CXSecurity.com
T
Threat Research - Cisco Blogs
T
Threatpost
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
Application and Cybersecurity Blog
K
KPMG report finds enterprise disconnect between AI and its ROI | CIO
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
月光博客
月光博客
Spread Privacy
Spread Privacy
S
Secure Thoughts
宝玉的分享
宝玉的分享
博客园 - 三生石上(FineUI控件)
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
The Last Watchdog
The Last Watchdog
Y
Y Combinator Blog
I
Intezer
博客园 - 【当耐特】
B
Blog RSS Feed
Attack and Defense Labs
Attack and Defense Labs
I
InfoQ
博客园 - 叶小钗
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
V2EX - 技术
V2EX - 技术
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Cyber Security Advisories - MS-ISAC
Hugging Face - Blog
Hugging Face - Blog
H
Help Net Security
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes

PostHog's RSS Feed

Training our own AI models - PostHog From 270GB RAM to 5GB: Moving local flag evaluation from Django to Rust The best analytics stack for vibe-coded apps The do's and don'ts of minimum viable product marketing - PostHog The best MCP servers for startups, by workflow 4,063 errors closed without a human opening PostHog – here's what we learned - PostHog PostHog Code and the self-driving product - PostHog Why attacking your competitors online is dumb - PostHog The best real-time analytics platforms for developers, compared DuckDB vs ClickHouse: Why we use both at PostHog - PostHog PostHog's next chapter - PostHog Making Claude Cowork actually useful - PostHog PostHog vs Matomo in-depth tool comparison You're doing lifecycle emails wrong Untangling Tokio and Rayon in production: From 2s latency spikes to 94ms flat The best HIPAA-compliant A/B testing tools - PostHog A beginner's guide to testing AI agents - PostHog I hate the standup bot (so I built an agent to do it for me) - PostHog The best CDPs for developers, compared The best error tracking tools for developers, compared The best feature flag software for developers, compared 7 best session replay tools for mobile apps 7 best free open source business intelligence tools right now 7 best free and open source LLM observability tools PostHog vs LogRocket in-depth tool comparison The most popular PostHog alternatives, compared Open source (and self-hosted) session replay tools - PostHog The 9 best GA4 alternatives for apps and websites - PostHog PostHog vs Google Analytics 4 in-depth tool comparison How we built automatic clustering for LLM traces - PostHog The 7 best HIPAA-compliant analytics tools 8 best open source analytics tools you can self-host - PostHog The best product analytics tools for startups, compared PostHog vs FullStory in-depth tool comparison The best in-app survey tools for product teams, compared The 7 best mobile app analytics tools PostHog vs Hotjar in-depth tool comparison The 8 best free and open-source feature flag services - PostHog The 5 best free and open-source A/B testing tools - PostHog The best mobile app A/B testing tools, compared What is a feature flag? Feature Flags vs Remote Config vs A/B Testing PostHog is now available in Vercel’s v0 The best Heap alternatives & competitors, compared PostHog vs Heap in-depth tool comparison PostHog vs Pendo in-depth tool comparison PostHog × Vercel: feature flags, minus the plumbing Your logs' final destination is in GA. You always end up here anyway Behind the scenes of a PostHog hackathon - PostHog The most popular Mixpanel alternatives & competitors, compared PostHog vs Mixpanel in-depth tool comparison The 9 best GDPR-compliant analytics tools How we use Logs at PostHog The best web analytics tools for developers, compared Stop AI slop: Run evals with LLM-as-a-Judge - PostHog You product data just got a job: Workflows is now out App onboarding: How to fix drop-off points Meet Logs (beta) – logs with all the tools you’re already using Why small teams crush tiger teams How we built user behavior analysis with multi-modal LLMs (in 5 not-so-easy steps) - PostHog The best Contentsquare alternatives & competitors, compared 8 learnings from 1 year of agents – PostHog AI - PostHog Why we killed our AI product assistant Workflows graduate to beta! Product data, meet automation The best Rollbar alternatives & competitors, compared Workflows are now in Alpha and I already broke mine - PostHog I've consistently underestimated how important communication is as a CEO - PostHog How we made feature flags even faster and more reliable The best session replay tools for developers, compared What I learned attending my first ever hackathon - PostHog Did you know AI is answering our community questions? - PostHog How not to be boring - PostHog We built an internal tool to generate changelog images for social media - PostHog What we built at our windswept Mykonos hackathon - PostHog How we built our onboarding email flow (with actual performance data) - PostHog We're building a better PostHog community by closing our public Slack - PostHog Introducing Notebooks for PostHog - PostHog Why we've launched PostHog user surveys - PostHog How we made feature flags faster and more reliable - PostHog In-depth: ClickHouse vs Redshift - PostHog Introducing HouseWatch: An open-source toolkit for ClickHouse - PostHog Introducing HogQL: Direct SQL access for PostHog - PostHog What we built at our sun-kissed Aruba hackathon - PostHog In-depth: ClickHouse vs BigQuery - PostHog In-depth: ClickHouse vs Elasticsearch - PostHog HogMail #22: Why do companies over-hire?" - PostHog Our simpler goal: Help engineers to be better at product - PostHog In-depth: ClickHouse vs Snowflake - PostHog HogMail #21: Avoiding the "Product Death Cycle" - PostHog Sunsetting Kubernetes support for PostHog - PostHog Why 'Product Engineer' is the most fun role I've had in tech - PostHog HogMail #20: Why do startups fail? - PostHog The best Google Optimize alternatives for apps and websites - PostHog Array 1.43.0: Massive performance improvements! - PostHog In-depth: ClickHouse vs Druid - PostHog HogMail #19: Which meetings should you kill? - PostHog CEO diary: The things I learned in 2022 - PostHog The essential tools used by product engineers - PostHog HogMail #18: What can SaaS learn from the New York Times? - PostHog What is a product engineer? - Product Engineer Handbook - PostHog Array 1.42.0: Get beta features via our roadmap! - PostHog
PostHog raises $12 million in funding led by GV and Y Combinator - PostHog
2020-12-17 · via PostHog's RSS Feed

(Dec 17, 2020) – PostHog, the open source product analytics company, today announced $12 million in funding and major new features - including plugins, session recordings and feature flags. The company’s Series A was led by GV (formerly Google Ventures), with participation from Y Combinator’s Continuity Fund. PostHog also brings on board Jason Warner (CTO, GitHub) as an investor, joining Solomon Hykes (Founder, Docker) and others who participated in the company’s seed round.

Since February 2020, there have been 3,000 deployments of PostHog’s software, ranging from startups to some of the world’s largest institutions. PostHog was originally conceived during Y Combinator’s Winter 2020 batch, where co-founders James Hawkins (CEO) and Tim Glaser (CTO) had been working on a different product at the time, but were frustrated at having to send user data to third parties to understand which features of their software were being used.

On learning how enterprises self-build a data pipeline, data lake, and analytics stack, the pair quickly realized they could build something much easier to use for large teams of developers or product managers, that would help anyone answer simple product questions without writing any code or sending any data to a third party.

Today, PostHog enables software teams to understand user behavior – auto-capturing events, performing product analytics and dashboarding, enabling video replays, and rolling out new features behind feature flags, all based on its single open source platform.

James Hawkins, co-founder and CEO, said: “Our goal is to increase the number of successful products in the world. That starts with empowering engineers to improve a business’ metrics and consolidating the disparate set of tools out there today to understand user behavior. We also now offer PostHog Enterprise, which is a more scalable version of our platform, designed to support tens of thousands to tens of millions of users.”

PostHog raised an initial $3M seed round in March 2020, as COVID-19 caused many parts of the U.S. to go into lockdown. Unimpeded by the shift to remote work, the company then closed a $9M Series A from GV and Y Combinator’s Continuity Fund in July. The latest round, led by GV, has enabled PostHog to further build the team, expand the breadth of use cases, and to launch a scalable enterprise version.

Tyson Clark, General Partner at GV said: “PostHog’s approach to open source product analytics for developers addresses a large market opportunity in product analytics. PostHog has seen strong early traction from the developer community, and we continue to be impressed with the execution and vision of the co-founding team.”

Hawkins added: “We’ve been designed to be all-remote and open source from scratch. Anyone in the world can view all our policies or even suggest changes to them. Having public discussions and policies written down avoids the need for most meetings, so we can work across multiple time zones, and lets us easily onboard our team much more rapidly than a traditional organization.”

PostHog will use the funding to continue building out its product and engineering teams, accelerate the delivery of new platform features, and enhance its PostHog Enterprise offering.

About PostHog

PostHog is an open source developer platform. PostHog enables software teams to understand user behavior – auto-capturing events, performing product analytics and dashboarding, enabling video replays, and rolling out new features behind feature flags, all based on their single open source platform. The product’s open source approach enables companies to self-host, removing the need to send data externally.

Founded in 2020 by James Hawkins and Tim Glaser, PostHog was a member of Y Combinator’s Winter 2020 batch, and has subsequent raised $12m in funding from GV, Y Combinator and notable angel investors including Jason Warner (CTO, GitHub), Solomon Hykes (Founder, Docker) and David Cramer (Founder, Sentry).

About Y Combinator Continuity Fund

YC Continuity is an investment fund dedicated to supporting founders as they scale their companies. Our primary goal is to support YC alumni companies by investing in their subsequent funding rounds, though we occasionally invest in non-YC companies as well.

Like YC’s early-stage partners, the entire YC Continuity team has strong operating experience. We work to create opportunities for founders to continue their personal growth and scale their companies successfully.

We also run the YC Growth Program, which brings together founder-CEOs who are leading rapidly growing companies.

Press contacts press@posthog.com

PostHog is an open source developer platform that helps people build successful products. We help you debug and ship your product faster.

Want to just try it already?

(Sorry for the shameless CTA.)