Showing 5 open source projects for "edge"

View related business solutions
  • Ship Agents Faster Icon
    Ship Agents Faster

    Transform your applications and workflows into powerful agentic systems at global scale.

    Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform lets you rapidly build, scale, govern and optimize production-ready agents grounded in your organization's data. The platform enables developers to build custom or pre-built agents for virtually any use case. New customers get $300 in free credits.
    Get Started Free
  • AI-powered service management for IT and enterprise teams Icon
    AI-powered service management for IT and enterprise teams

    Enterprise-grade ITSM, for every business

    Give your IT, operations, and business teams the ability to deliver exceptional services—without the complexity. Maximize operational efficiency with refreshingly simple, AI-powered Freshservice.
    Try it Free
  • 1
    KServe

    KServe

    Standardized Serverless ML Inference Platform on Kubernetes

    ...It aims to solve production model serving use cases by providing performant, high abstraction interfaces for common ML frameworks like Tensorflow, XGBoost, ScikitLearn, PyTorch, and ONNX. It encapsulates the complexity of autoscaling, networking, health checking, and server configuration to bring cutting edge serving features like GPU Autoscaling, Scale to Zero, and Canary Rollouts to your ML deployments. It enables a simple, pluggable, and complete story for Production ML Serving including prediction, pre-processing, post-processing and explainability. KServe is being used across various organizations.
    Downloads: 9 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 2
    Nebula-Python-SDK

    Nebula-Python-SDK

    A python SDK for managing Nebula container orchestrator

    ...Nebula container orchestrator aims to help devs and ops treat IoT devices just like distributed Dockerized apps. It aim is to act as Docker orchestrator for IoT devices as well as for distributed services such as CDN or edge computing that can span thousands (possibly even millions) of devices worldwide and it does it all while being open-source and completely free. Nebula imposes no limits on the scale of the cluster, each component in it is designed to scale out to allow millions of workers to be managed by it. Designed to connect to devices that are spread around the globe Nebula is tolerant of network connection issues and will resync the device when it reconnects. ...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 3
    Nebula docs

    Nebula docs

    Documentation repo of nebula orchestration system

    Nebula is a open source distributed Docker orchestrator designed for massive scales (tens of thousands of servers/worker devices), unlike Mesos/Swarm/Kubernetes it has the ability to have workers distributed on high latency connections (such as the internet) yet have the pods(containers) be managed centrally with changes taking affect (almost) immediately, this makes Nebula ideal for managing a vast cluster of servers\devices across the globe, some example use cases are appliances\virtual appliances located at clients data centers, edge computing, and POS systems. Ever wandered how your going to push an update to that smart fridge your company is working on as it's thousands of devices around the globe? wish you could have the assurance that your service will always use the latest code\envvars\etc in all of it's edge locations? want the ability to stop\start a globally distributed service with a single command? ...
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • 4
    Nebula reporter

    Nebula reporter

    The optional reporter container which reads nebula reports from Kafka

    ...Ever wandered how your going to push an update to that smart fridge your company is working on as it's thousands of devices around the globe? wish you could have the assurance that your service will always use the latest code\envvars\etc in all of its edge locations? want the ability to stop\start a globally distributed service with a single command? Nebula was designed from the ground up to answer all of these needs and much more, refer to the documentation if your interested in seeing how to use it.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • $300 Free Credits for Your Google Cloud Projects Icon
    $300 Free Credits for Your Google Cloud Projects

    Start building on Google Cloud with $300 in free credits. No commitment, no credit card required until you're ready to scale.

    Launch your next project with $300 in free Google Cloud credits—no strings attached. Test, build, and deploy without risk. Use your credits across the entire Google Cloud platform to find what works best for your needs. After your credits are used, continue with always-free tier services. Only pay when you're ready to scale. Sign up in minutes and start exploring.
    Start Free Trial
  • 5
    Nebula worker

    Nebula worker

    The worker node manager container which manages nebula nodes

    Nebula is a open source distributed Docker orchestrator designed for massive scales (tens of thousands of servers/worker devices), unlike Mesos/Swarm/Kubernetes it has the ability to have workers distributed on high latency connections (such as the internet) yet have the pods(containers) be managed centrally with changes taking affect (almost) immediately, this makes Nebula ideal for managing a vast cluster of servers\devices across the globe, some example use cases are IoT devices, appliances\virtual appliances located at clients data centers, and edge computing. Nebula imposes no limits on the scale of the cluster, each component in it is designed to scale out to allow millions of workers to be managed by it. Designed to connect to devices that are spread around the globe Nebula is tolerant of network connection issues and will resync the device when it reconnects. With a single API call you can deploy a new container version to managed devices around the globe in minutes.
    Downloads: 0 This Week
    Last Update:
    See Project
  • Previous
  • You're on page 1
  • Next
Auth0 Logo