Something special is happening in the tech world. More and more companies are adopting the open-source model and are reshaping the entire software industry as we know it. Investors are putting their money down to help these companies grow their businesses and see a triple return of investment.
Faster innovation and less duplication of effort are the main drivers behind open innovation. And it seems to be taking over the world of startups with the speed of light. If you’re impressed with open-source-centric startups as we are, you’ll be happy to hear that we’ve put together a list of 10 startups that we think are shaping the future of open source. All of them have already amassed six-figure funding, and are continually coming up with more innovative ways to improve their product or service.
Let’s explore!
SiFive
Total funding amount (Crunchbase): $64.1M
Industry: Artificial Intelligence, Internet of Things, Semiconductor
Founders: Andrew Waterman, Dr. Krste Asanovic, Dr. Yunsup Lee
The semiconductor industry has a new player that has managed to raise $64.1M since its creation in 2015. The startup’s name is SiFive and it specializes in creating open-source chip platforms.
SiFive was founded by the designers of RISC-V, an open-source hardware instruction set architecture. Anyone can use the RISC-V free of charge to design, manufacture, and sell chips and software. The startup is encouraging more developed companies to design their own chips, just like Apple does. And they’re making it less expensive and less complicated for small startup teams to get involved with chip design.
The beauty of the customized RISC-V based semiconductors is that they help system designers reduce costs and time-to-market. According to SiFive’s CEO, Naveed Sherwani, the company has already attracted customers like Tesla, Toshiba, and Daimler-Benz.
Cloud9
Total funding amount (Crunchbase): $44M
Industry: Software
Founders: Gerald Starr, Stephen J. Kammerer, Leo Papadopoulos
There’s an innovative startup company that’s reinventing the way traders communicate and it goes by the name of Cloud9. It’s a voice collaboration and analytics firm that offers voice analytics, sophisticated trader communication and transcription solutions to distributed financial teams.
The company was created in 2014 when a group of data scientists and engineers came together to develop a solution for cloud-based voice communications. According to its founders, the product can help financial companies “remain competitive, compliant, and profitable in the market”.
Cloud9 is another Fintech startup that has understood the value of open-source software. The company believes that voice services are destined to become an open ecosystem, like any other communication channel. Their goal is to integrate with partners that are active in the voice ecosystem to create a more complete service to their users in financial institutions. With total funding of $44M, the company promises that its product will reduce communications costs by up to 50% by eliminating pricey private lines and desktop hardware.
OpenFin
Total funding amount (Crunchbase): $25M
Industry: FinTech
Founders: Chuck Doerr and Mazy Dar
OpenFin is to the Fintech world what iOS is to the rest of the world. Banks, hedge funds and trading platforms have all installed the software on their desktops. In fact, according to the company, their OS has been deployed to nearly 1,500 companies and runs on 1,000 apps on 200,000 desktops.
In a nutshell, OpenFin OS modernizes trading apps. People in finance can now run their apps on a modern OS that is created for the digital era. The OS enables easy workspace management and automates your workflow. The best part? It runs on every operating system, including Mac, Linux, and Windows.
OpenFin is a thriving Fintech startup that’s active in the open-source community. With total funding of $25M, the company CEO’s mission is “to have the OpenFin OS on every desktop at every bank and buy-side firm.”
Docker
Total funding amount (Crunchbase): $272.9M
Industry: Cloud Computing, Open Source, SaaS
Founders: Solomon Hykes
In 2013, a container technology was launched as an open source Docker Engine. The company behind the product was Docker Inc. and the founder was Solomon Hykes. In a nutshell, Docker is an open platform for building, shipping, and running distributed applications.
Experts agree that the startup has revolutionized software development and has made life simpler for developers. Docker is active in the open source ecosystem through an array of projects that encourage the containerization movement. The company offers a number of tools and other components that help developers build, ship, and run their applications. In fact, millions of people worldwide have used these container components.
Sonatype
Total funding amount (Crunchbase): $154.7M
Industry: Enterprise Software, Open Source
Founders: Brian Fox, Jason van Zyl
Open source innovation has never been more vibrant and Sonatype is another active company in the open source realm. The aim of the company is to help enterprises get precise information about open source components and speed up software innovation, quality, and security.
Sonatype is trending in 2019 as open source continues to take over the world and companies worldwide continue to adopt open source. As one of the major problems of IT leaders today is accelerating the pace of software innovation while also improving security, Sonatype has developed a platform that addresses this high-priority market need.
DataBricks
Total funding amount (Crunchbase): $497M
Industry: Analytics, Software, Open Source
Founders: Ali Ghodsi, Andy Konwinski, Matei Zaharia, Patrick Wendell, Ion Stoica, Reynold Xin, Scott Shenker
The designers of Apache Spark have launched a new startup company that aims to accelerate innovation. Their new product is Databricks and it provides a data-analytics platform with machine-learning abilities. Data scientists can now handle large amounts of information in a less complex manner. Databricks just signed a $250 million in funding in February, and now boasts total funding of $497 million.
The startup is trending in 2019 as it’s a high-quality open source project created to fix the reliability issues affecting data swamps. It helps companies to build their data pipelines across data storage systems and prepare data sets for data scientists. Companies are spending thousands of dollars to analyze data in order to find value and this platform makes things less expensive and complex.
Confluent
Total funding amount (Crunchbase): $205.9M
Industry: Big Data, Open Source, Software
Founders: Jay Kreps, Jun Rao, Neha Narkhede
The creators of Kafka have added another amazing product in their extensive portfolio. This time it’s a big data and open source company known as Confluent. The product completes Apache Kafka, a distributed streaming platform. Confluent offers an event-streaming platform that processes vast amounts of data in real time. Businesses with large amounts of data that need instant reactions can now have their apps react more rapidly and at a bigger scale.
According to Kreps, Confluent is not operating alone. It’s dependent on its massive community of open-source contributors who’re continually advancing the product.
Although the base open-source component of Confluent is available for free, users do have to pay for the additional tooling the company has designed to make it less complicated to use Kafka. As thousands of users and companies today already use Apache Kafka, Confluent will continue to scale extremely quickly.
Redis Labs
Total funding amount (Crunchbase): $146.6M
Industry: Analytics, Big Data, Cloud Data Services, Open Source, Software
Founders: Ofer Bengal, Yiftach Shoolman
Redis Labs is popular in the open-source world as the home of the free Redis database, created by Salvatore Sanfilippo. The company has been only growing in popularity among developers thanks to the speed with which it gives results.
According to the company’s founder, Ofer Bengal, “the company runs 1,000 times faster than disk databases and can process 10 million transactions per second in under a millisecond.” In February, Redis Labs announced that it closed $60 million in series E financing.
Conclusion
It’s hard to believe that only five years ago, the majority of investors were skeptic about adopting open-source as a business model. Today, five years into the future, open-source companies are dominating the software universe.
Million-dollar investment deals are taking place on a daily basis and companies like Confluent and DataBricks are slowly working their way through the growth stages of their evolution. It’s pretty clear that the open-source business model won’t be going away anytime soon and is slowly eating into the proprietary software market. Unless proprietary software businesses adapt, they’re doomed to lose.
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