Ookla

Ookla, a global leader in connectivity intelligence, brings together the expertise of Speedtest®, Downdetector®, Ekahau®, and RootMetrics® to deliver unmatched network insights. By combining multi-source data with industry-leading expertise, we transform network performance metrics into strategic, actionable insights. Our solutions empower the organizations that supply connectivity with essential information to help them shape and optimize their networks. We give voice to the real-world experiences of people and systems that rely on those networks every day.

Billions of Daily Samples

Billions of daily samples providing insight into network performance and consumer experience

145K+ Articles Published Annually

145,000+ thousand annual articles that reference Ookla brands

200+ Countries

Data and insights available in 200+ countries for true global scale

Recent News

Morningstar  
"Patients today face a complex healthcare landscape, and finding the right physician can feel overwhelming," said Steve Leibforth, Managing Director of Castle Connolly. "The Top Doctor recognition represents more than an honor-it's a mark of trust, signaling to patients that these physicians have earned recognition from their peers for clinical expertise, compassionate care, and professional excellence. In an era of uncertainty, that assurance matters more than ever."
Yahoo! Finance  
¶¶ÒõÆÆ½â°æ, Inc. (NASDAQ: ZD), today announced its participation in one investor conference in February: Susquehanna 15th Annual Technology Conference.
USA Today  
Baby names inspired by places such as London and Dallas, and names that start with D and K are on their way out and will be heard less in 2026, new research by BabyCenter has found. The digital parenting resource, that has been publishing reports on baby names since 2004, in a news release Jan. 13, said it "analyzed a year’s worth of baby name data to identify names experiencing the steepest drops in popularity to see which names parents are leaning away from at large, and could be facing extinction."
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