Xively

Xively by LogMeIn
Public
Traded as NASDAQ: LOGM
Industry Computer software
Founded London, England (2007)
Founder Usman Haque [1]
Headquarters Boston, Massachusetts, USA
Website xively.com

Xively (formerly known as Cosm and Pachube) is a division of LogMeIn Inc. (NASDAQ: LOGM), a global, public company that provides remote access and collaboration products including Rescue, Boldchat, join.me, and Cubby. Xively by LogMeIn offers an Internet of Things (IoT) platform as a service, business services, and partners that enable businesses to quickly connect products and operations to the Internet. It is pronounced "zively" (rhymes with lively).

History

In 2007, London architect Usman Haque [2] founded Pachube (pronounced Patch bay) as a data infrastructure and community for the Internet of Things. Following the nuclear accidents in Japan in 2011, Xively was used by volunteers to interlink Geiger counters across the country to monitor the fallout.[3] In July 2011, Pachube announced that they had been acquired by LogMeIn and renamed to Cosm.[4] Cosm came out of beta development and was rebranded as Xively to become a Public Cloud for the IoT in May 2013.[5]

Products & Services

Xively Cloud Services

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 MQTT. The API supports REST, WebSockets, and MQTT.

Xively Business Services

The company’s consulting services for building IoT-based products.

Xively Partner Network

Xively has partnered with chipset companies such as ARM, Atmel and TI as well as solution providers and IoT industry alliances like OASIS.[6]

Awards & Industry Recognition

References

As of this edit, this article uses content from "Pachube", which is licensed in a way that permits reuse under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License, but not under the GFDL. All relevant terms must be followed.


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