Once a company has provisioned the on-premise servers for the Kinvey install, the service ties them into its release system and from then on it’s managed by Kinvey. As a part of the dedicated solutions, enterprises can then select which add-ons to make available to their developers and customize the developer portal for their employees. The company plans to get its own HIPAA and PCI certifications in the near future, too. Kinvey CEO Sravish Sridhar tells me those are exactly the kinds of industries this service is going after (pharmaceutical, insurance, financial services, etc.) with its on-premise solution. In many industries, these companies also have to comply with government regulations (HIPAA/PCI) that effectively preclude them from putting their data into a public cloud service. While BaaS platforms like Parse or StackMob (which is about to shut down after its acquisition by PayPal) remove much of the hassle of managing and scaling the server stack that powers modern applications, enterprises are still often hesitant to host their proprietary data on somebody else’s servers. Kinvey, the enterprise-centric backend as a service (BaaS) platform for mobile apps, is launching a new feature today that will allow its customers to run their apps in a dedicated private cloud or on-premise instead of on Kinvey’s regular multi-tenant platform.
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