2. In 2007, London architect Usman Haque
founded Pachube (pronounced Patch as a data
infrastructure and community for the Inbay)Internet of
Things. Following the nuclear accidents in Japan in 2011,
Pachube was used by volunteers to interlink Geiger
counters across the country to monitor the fallout.
In July 2011, Pachube announced that they had been
acquired by LogMeIn and renamed to Cosm
Cosm came out of beta development and was
rebranded as Xively to become a Public Cloud for the IoT
in May 2013.
Google purchased Xively from LogMeIn on March 20,
2018.
4. A Platform as a Service built for the IoT.
According to their website, this includes
directory services, data services, a trust
engine for security, and web-based
management application. Xively's
messaging is built on a publish-subscribe
protocol called T. The API supports REST,
WebSockets.
6. Xively has partnered with
chipset companies such as
ARM, Atmel and TI as well
as solution providers and
IoT industry alliances like
OASIS.
7. Best Cloud-Based Technology for Mobile
[2014, GSMA Mobile World Congress]
The World's Top 10 Most Innovative
Companies in The Internet of Things
[2014, Fast Company]
Battle of the Platforms: Best Enabling Non
Platform Technology [2013 & 2014, M2M
Conference]