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Kaleido, a startup that aims to help companies implement blockchain technology, has launched a new platform in collaboration with Amazon Web Services (AWS). Kaleido Marketplace will provide tools and protocols for all the components of the new blockchain projects, "from the app to the chain", said founder and CEO Steve Cerveny Forbes. & Nbsp;
Komgo freight platform, whose network of financial institutions includes Citi, ING, Koch Supply & amp; Trading, MUFG Bank, Société Générale, Credit Agricole Group, BNP Paribas and Shell are current customers.
Kaleido is one of over 50 blockchain projects overseen by ConsenSys, the blockchain technology company and incubator launched by Ethereum co-founder Joe Lubin in 2014. Kaleido launched in May of this year, offering specific blockchain support at businesses as part of the Blockchain Business Cloud Platform. Cerveny sees the Kaleido market as the next evolution of this service.
"We knew that customers who were struggling to adopt blockchain needed more help than just the chain.We knew they needed more advanced components and lsqb, which were easily implemented and pre-integrated," he says.
The marketplace offers are full stack, which means that they include everything from internal developer tools to user interface interfaces, and are designed to make it easier for companies to quickly implement blockchain solutions. There are options to help manage not only a blockchain network but also the associated infrastructure and network protocols. In this way, companies can focus more on their operations and less on the complicated nuances of technology.
"Building on an open blockchain system, Komgo can choose from the best protocols under development in the ecosystem and use existing building blocks for an optimized solution," Komgo CEO Souleïma Baddi said in a statement.
AWS has been a partner since Kaleido's launch at the start of this year and Kaleido worked with Amazon's blockchain team to create AWS integrations that would work for corporate blockchain customers. Amazon, of course, is not the only big company that explores this space. IBM, Maersk, HSBC, Deloitte and SAP have all been involved in corporate blockchain projects.
Through Kaleido's marketplace, companies have access to AWS services such as private networking and data backup, other common blockchain services such as HD portfolios and industrial products like Chainlink (for smart contracts), Viant (for supply chain management) and OpenLaw (for legal contracts).
The company stated in a statement that the first users of the platform estimated that Kaleido has eliminated 80% of the custom code that would otherwise have been required to build their blockchain solutions.
And through Kaleido's partnership program, third-party technology vendors will be able to promote their products on the market, incorporate Kaleido into their blockchain projects or use Kaleido for consultations.
Greenfence Consumer, which organizes blockchain-based promotions and digital collectibles for companies such as Sony, Fox and Heineken, is one of these partners. They have been using Kaleido in the last three months. "Kaleido has made our lives simpler," says Jonas Hudson, co-founder of the company.
For Greenfence, the use of Kaleido has helped make blockchain development and innovation more accessible. This means that technology teams can accelerate faster and concept demonstrations can turn into work projects faster. & Nbsp;
"Kaleido, first of all, abstracts many of the complexities of the Ethereum chain," says Jon Labrie, SVP of Blockchain Systems and Applications of Greenfence. "They eliminate the complexities of Amazon's cloud engineering … it's easy for me to communicate how it works to someone who knows nothing about the blockchain technology", whether it's a new engineer or an important partner like Sony.
Anne Hale Miglarese, CEO of Kaleido's Radiant Earth Foundation, says Kaleido has helped its organization accelerate their proof-of-concept blockchain. Radiant Earth aggregates high quality satellite images for NGOs, and Miglarese predicts that other organizations such as yours are not far behind. "I have no doubt that in three or four or five years all these geospatial platforms will probably have a blockchain implementation," he says. & Nbsp;
In the end, Miglarese hopes the Kaleido platform will ease the friction of its organization's operations and give it a better view of the industry. "He is eliminating weaknesses," he says.
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Kaleido, a startup that aims to help companies implement blockchain technology, has launched a new platform in collaboration with Amazon Web Services (AWS). Kaleido Marketplace will provide tools and protocols for all the components of the new blockchain projects, "from the app to the chain", said founder and CEO Steve Cerveny Forbes.
Komgo commodity platform, whose network of financial institutions includes Citi, ING, Koch Supply & Trading, MUFG Bank, Société Générale, Credit Agricole Group, BNP Paribas and Shell, is a current customer.
Kaleido is one of over 50 blockchain projects overseen by ConsenSys, the blockchain technology company and incubator launched by Ethereum co-founder Joe Lubin in 2014. Kaleido launched in May of this year, offering specific blockchain support at businesses as part of the Blockchain Business Cloud Platform. Cerveny sees the Kaleido market as the next evolution of this service.
"We knew that customers who were struggling to adopt blockchain needed more help than the simple chain." We knew we needed more advanced components. [that were] easily implemented and pre-integrated, "he says.
The marketplace offers are full stack, which means that they include everything from internal developer tools to user interface interfaces, and are designed to make it easier for companies to quickly implement blockchain solutions. There are options to help manage not only a blockchain network but also the associated infrastructure and network protocols. In this way, companies can focus more on their operations and less on the complicated nuances of technology.
"Building on an open blockchain system, Komgo can choose from the best protocols under development in the ecosystem and use existing building blocks for an optimized solution," Komgo CEO Souleïma Baddi said in a statement.
AWS has been a partner since Kaleido's launch at the start of this year and Kaleido worked with Amazon's blockchain team to create AWS integrations that would work for corporate blockchain customers. Amazon, of course, is not the only big company that explores this space. IBM, Maersk, HSBC, Deloitte and SAP have all been involved in corporate blockchain projects.
Through Kaleido's marketplace, companies have access to AWS services such as private networking and data backup, other common blockchain services such as HD portfolios and industrial products like Chainlink (for smart contracts), Viant (for supply chain management) and OpenLaw (for legal contracts).
The company stated in a statement that the first users of the platform estimated that Kaleido has eliminated 80% of the custom code that would otherwise have been required to build their blockchain solutions.
And through Kaleido's partnership program, third-party technology vendors will be able to promote their products on the market, incorporate Kaleido into their blockchain projects or use Kaleido for consultations.
Greenfence Consumer, which organizes blockchain-based promotions and digital collectibles for companies such as Sony, Fox and Heineken, is one of these partners. They have been using Kaleido in the last three months. "Kaleido has made our lives simpler," says Jonas Hudson, co-founder of the company.
For Greenfence, the use of Kaleido has helped make blockchain development and innovation more accessible. This means that technical teams can accelerate faster and concept demonstrations can turn into work projects faster.
"Kaleido, first of all, abstracts many of the complexities of the Ethereum chain," says Jon Labrie, SVP of Blockchain Systems and Applications of Greenfence. "They eliminate the complexities of Amazon's cloud engineering … it's easy for me to communicate how it works to someone who knows nothing about the blockchain technology", whether it's a new engineer or an important partner like Sony.
Anne Hale Miglarese, CEO of Kaleido's Radiant Earth Foundation, says Kaleido has helped its organization accelerate their proof-of-concept blockchain. Radiant Earth aggregates high quality satellite images for NGOs, and Miglarese predicts that other organizations such as yours are not far behind. "I have no doubt that in three or four or five years, all these geospatial platforms will probably have a blockchain implementation," he says.
In the end, Miglarese hopes the Kaleido platform will ease the friction of its organization's operations and give it a better view of the industry. "He is eliminating weaknesses," he says.