3rd-Party Software Platform
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A 3rd-Party Software Platform is a software platform that is developed and maintained by third-party developers.
- Context:
- Task Input: Platform Requirements, Development Configurations
- Task Output: Deployed Applications, Platform Services
- Task Performance Measure: Platform Performance Metrics such as system reliability, service availability, and resource efficiency
- ...
- It can (typically) provide Development Tools for building third-party applications.
- It can (typically) enable Application Hosting through platform infrastructure.
- It can (typically) support System Integration through standardized interfaces.
- It can (typically) maintain Platform Security through security protocols.
- It can (typically) offer Resource Management through allocation systems.
- ...
- It can (often) provide Application Programming Interfaces for system integration.
- It can (often) include Software Development Kits for application development.
- It can (often) enable Automated Workflows through process automation.
- It can (often) support Data Management through storage systems.
- It can (often) implement Version Control through revision tracking.
- It can (often) offer User Authentication through identity management.
- ...
- It can range from being a Simple Development Platform to being an Enterprise Development Platform, depending on its platform sophistication.
- It can range from being a Cloud Platform to being an On-Premises Platform, depending on its deployment model.
- It can range from being a General-Purpose Platform to being an Industry-Specific Platform, depending on its domain focus.
- It can range from being a Code-Centric Platform to being a No-Code Platform, depending on its development approach.
- It can range from being a Single-Region Platform to being a Multi-Region Platform, depending on its geographic coverage.
- It can range from being a Free Platform to being a Commercial Platform, depending on its business model.
- It can range from being a Developer-Focused Platform to being a Business-User Platform, depending on its target audience.
- ...
- It can integrate with Cloud Services for scalability.
- It can connect to Database Systems for data storage.
- It can support Monitoring Tools for performance tracking.
- It can enable Security Features for data protection.
- It can interface with Analytics Platforms for usage analysis.
- ...
- Examples:
- Enterprise Infrastructure Platforms, such as:
- Cloud Infrastructure Platforms, such as:
- Private Cloud Platforms, such as:
- Edge Computing Platforms, such as:
- Development and DevOps Platforms, such as:
- Source Control Platforms, such as:
- CI/CD Platforms, such as:
- Infrastructure Management Platforms, such as:
- AI and ML Platforms, such as:
- Large Language Model Platforms, such as:
- OpenAI Platform, including OpenAI LLM Fine-Tuning System.
- Anthropic Claude, for enterprise AI solutions.
- Machine Learning Platforms, such as:
- AI Development Platforms, such as:
- Hugging Face, for AI model collaboration.
- H2O.ai, for enterprise AI solutions.
- Large Language Model Platforms, such as:
- Business Application Platforms, such as:
- Enterprise Resource Platforms, such as:
- SAP Business One, for business management.
- Oracle NetSuite, for cloud ERP.
- CRM Platforms, such as:
- Workflow Automation Platforms, such as:
- Enterprise Resource Platforms, such as:
- Industry-Specific Platforms, such as:
- Healthcare Platforms, such as:
- Legal Platforms, such as:
- Engineering Platforms, such as:
- Communication Platforms, such as:
- Enterprise Communication Platforms, such as:
- Twilio, for communication APIs.
- Slack Platform, for team collaboration.
- Customer Service Platforms, such as:
- Zendesk, for customer service.
- Freshdesk, for help desk management.
- AI Communication Platforms, such as:
- Enterprise Communication Platforms, such as:
- E-commerce Platforms, such as:
- Enterprise E-commerce Platforms, such as:
- Small Business E-commerce Platforms, such as:
- Shopify, for online stores.
- WooCommerce, for WordPress commerce.
- Payment Platforms, such as:
- Content Management Platforms, such as:
- Enterprise CMS Platforms, such as:
- Headless CMS Platforms, such as:
- Contentful, for headless CMS.
- Prismic, for content APIs.
- Website Builder Platforms, such as:
- WordPress.com, for website hosting.
- Wix, for website builders.
- Security Platforms, such as:
- Identity Management Platforms, such as:
- Okta, for access management.
- Auth0, for identity management.
- Network Security Platforms, such as:
- Palo Alto Networks, for network security.
- Cloudflare, for web security.
- Endpoint Security Platforms, such as:
- CrowdStrike, for endpoint protection.
- Carbon Black, for endpoint security.
- Identity Management Platforms, such as:
- ...
- Enterprise Infrastructure Platforms, such as:
- Counter-Examples:
- Open-Source Framework that must be installed and configured, and where source code is freely available for modification.
- Custom-Built In-House Platforms used exclusively within an organization and not provided by a third-party vendor.
- Legacy Systems, which predate modern platform architectures.
- Proprietary Systems, which aren't available for third-party use.
- See: Software as a Service, Platform as a Service, Enterprise Software, Cloud Computing, Cloud Service Provider, Marketplace Platform, Digital Ecosystem, API Integration, Development Platform, Infrastructure as a Service.