Article 4V21W How does Plume get all these ISP partnerships? Open source software

How does Plume get all these ISP partnerships? Open source software

by
Jim Salter
from Ars Technica - All content on (#4V21W)
  • opensync-cloud-diagram-1.png

    This is the most basic overview of what OpenSync is and where it fits in a network diagram-it's a bridge from Wi-Fi devices to a cloud-based management and control system. [credit: Plume ]

Yesterday, Charter Communications*-the second-largest ISP in the United States-announced its adoption of the OpenSync software platform for Spectrum's advanced in-home Wi-Fi. This raises a few questions, first of which is "what's OpenSync?"

The short answer is "Plume," which in turn means that Plume now has partnerships with the first- and second-largest ISPs in the United States, as well as the first- and second-largest in Canada-and also with the National Cable Television Collective (NCTC), a membership organization comprising several hundred independent US cable companies.

Earlier this month, we covered the announcement of a Plume partnership with J:COM, Japan's largest ISP. In that coverage, we referenced tighter integration into ISPs' existing infrastructure than better-known mesh alternatives such as Eero, Google (now Nest) Wi-Fi, or Orbi can provide. OpenSync is where that tighter integration comes from.

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