Join LF Edge community and accelerate edge computing adoption
Blog
Nov 19, 2019
LF Edge Member Spotlight: ZEDEDA
The LF Edge community is comprised of a diverse set of member companies that represent the IoT, Enterprise, Cloud and Telco Edge. The Member Spotlight blog series highlights these members and how they are contributing to and leveraging open source edge solutions. Today, we sat down with Aaron Williams, Developer Community…
Nov 12, 2019
Edge Computing at IoT Solutions World Congress 2019
Every year one of the world's largest Internet of Things trade shows, IoT Solutions World Congress, is held in Barcelona, Spain. It brings together device manufacturers, service providers, AI & ML companies and solutions integrators from around the world to share information about their products and the state of IoT…
Oct 24, 2019
The Inaugural EdgeX Open Hackathon
Written by Jason Shepherd, LF Edge Board Member On October 7th and 8th, I had the pleasure of attending the inaugural EdgeX Open Hackathon in Chicago. EdgeX Foundry is focused on facilitating interoperability between devices and applications, regardless of underlying hardware, OS, and connectivity protocol. The project is ultimately about…
Oct 14, 2019
End User Case Study: Monitoring industrial equipment using EdgeX Foundry
By Jason Shepherd, LF Edge Governing Board member and IoT and Edge Computing CTO, Dell Technologies Founded in 1996, Technotects is an IoT technology consulting firm with broad domain expertise in industrial use cases. When one of their industrial equipment OEM customers independently realized the power of the EdgeX Foundry…
Oct 1, 2019
An Akraino Developer Use Case
Written by technical members members of the Akraino Edge Stack project including Bruce Lin, Rutgers; Robert Qiu, Tencent; Hechun Zhang, Baidu; Tina Tsou, Arm; Ciprian Barbu, Enea; Allen Chen, Tencent; Gabriel Yang, Huawei; Feng Yang, Tencent; Jeremy Liu, Tencent ; Tapio Tallgren, Nokia; Cristina Pauna, Enea More intelligent edge nodes…
Sep 26, 2019
EdgeX Open Hackathon & Snaps
Snaps are self-contained application packages designed to run on any system that supports them. Each snap is a compressed SquashFS package (bearing a .snap extension), containing all the assets required by an application to run independently, including binaries, libraries, icons, etc. Snaps are managed by snap, the command-line userspace utility of the snapd service.…