Co-Initiator of Open Source platform OpenRemote
When there’s more than one open source IoT platform out there, how do you evaluate the one that best fits your needs? What are some common pitfalls to avoid? This article provides a brief overview of the top 5 contenders, with their strengths and weaknesses.
Open source means you are free to use, modify, combine or compile software code in any way you want, without any obligation, as long as you don’t redistribute it by means of hardware or web services. If you want to embed open source code in your OEM product or service, different options are available based on the type of open source license.
Open Source is relevant because you are not tied to the supplier of the code, thus preventing any unwanted vendor lock-in. Having full access to the source code, you have the flexibility to adjust to changing market conditions and extend, change or pivot when needed. Moreover, you have the ability to add or optimize functionality for your product.
If the code is free, how do open source IoT developers make money? The way most companies make money with open source software is with add-ons and support services. This ranges from paid-for advanced features, organizing a hosted service (SaaS), to project management, or support and maintenance for commercial users.
To identify the right open source IoT platform for your needs, consider the following additional criteria, based on organizational needs, quality, and legal concerns:
FIWARE is especially popular in Europe and South America. It is professionally backed by Atos, Engineering, NEC and Telefonica. On the non-profit side, it has the support of the Open Agile and Smart Cities communities. As a whole, it’s especially strong as a networked organization. However, potential users need to be aware that Fiware is not a single product, but a larger series of projects. This makes it hard to use in open source as it is extremely complex and CPU-intensive to deploy into a unified, complete product.
OpenBalena is not a complete IoT platform, merely a device orchestration tool that allows you to manage large numbers of devices in the field. It’s a complimentary function to all...
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OpenRemote is introducing a new open source IoT Platform, which is 100% open source (so no features behind a commercial version only).
It's already applied in larger professional applications in The Netherlands, UK, Germany and US, so ruggedised!
Main features:
Demo: https://demo.openremote.io
Source Code: https://github.com/openremote/openremote
License: APLv3
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like Pierre Kil and many others