
SolidRun, a developer and manufacturer of high-performance embedded solutions and edge computing platforms, has announced its support for the public beta of Google Cloud IoT Core, a fully managed service on Google Cloud Platform (GCP) designed to securely connect and manage IoT devices at scale. Cloud IoT Core is now publicly available to all users in beta, including new features and pricing plan.
With Cloud IoT Core, businesses can connect and centrally manage millions of globally dispersed IoT devices. When used as part of the broader Google Cloud IoT solution, it can ingest all IoT data and connect to Google Cloud's state of the art analytics services including Cloud Pub/Sub, Dataflow, Bigtable, BigQuery, and Machine Learning.
The MACCHIATObin ClearCloud 8K, is based on a Marvell ARMADA A8040 SoC, and features a quad core Arm Cortex A-72 1.6GHz processor, including 4GB DDR DIMM4 memory (16GB optional), dual 10GbE, MicroSD connectors, 3 x SATA 3.0, USB 3.0 and PCIex4 3.0 slot.
“It is only natural that a leading edge computing and gateway solution provider like SolidRun will complement its offering with an easy access to cloud services such as Google Cloud Platform,” said Dr. Atai Ziv, CEO, SolidRun.
SolidRun's MACCHIATObin ClearCloud 8K with Google's Cloud IoT Core is designed to allow users to easily and securely connect to GCP. The solution has been developed in collaboration with Sartura Ltd., a leading specialized open source developer and integrator for embedded applications, in conjunction with Marvell.
“With the MACCHIATObin ClearCloud 8K broadly available to customers on IoT Core, customers can gain visibility into new operational data and optimize for change in real-time,” said Adam Massey, Director, Strategic Technology Partners, Google Cloud. “Together with SolidRun, we are striving to make it easier to connect, manage, and drive real business value from IOT devices.”
Ken Briodagh is a writer and editor with more than a decade of experience under his belt. He is in love with technology and if he had his druthers would beta test everything from shoe phones to flying cars.Edited by
Ken Briodagh