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by erikwitt
3418 days ago
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I agree, the parse shutdown was organized extremely well. The open source parse server, one year of migration time and a ton of new vendors that now offer to host your parse app, all made it much easier to handle the shutdown. It's also great to see the community still working on the open source server. That said, there are a lot of upsides to having a company work full-time on your proprietary cloud solution and ensure its quality and availability. If an open source project dies or becomes poorly maintained you are in trouble too. Your team might not have the capacity to maintain this complex project on top of their actual tasks. Also open sourcing your platform is a big risk for a company. Take RethinkDB for example: Great database, outstanding team but without a working business model and most recently without a team working full time, it is doomed to die eventually. Nevertheless, we try to make migrating from and to Baqend as smooth as possible. You can import and export all your data and schemas, your custom business logic is written in Node.js and can be executed everywhere. You can also download a community server edition (single server setup) to host it by yourself. Still a lot of users even require proprietary solutions and the maintenance and support that comes with it. And often they have good reasons, from requiring a maintenance free platform to to warranties or license issues. After all, a lot of people are happy to lock into AWS even though solutions based on OpenStack, Eucalyptus etc. are available. |
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