Mendix

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Mendix
Industry
Founded2005; 19 years ago (2005)
Founders
  • Roald Kruit
  • Derek Roos
  • Derckjan Kruit
Headquarters,
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
Raymond Kok (CEO)
Number of employees
1,400 (2023)
ParentSiemens
Websitemendix.com

Mendix is a cloud-based low-code application development platform that provides tools for organizations to build web and mobile applications using visual drag-and-drop elements. Mendix was founded in 2005 in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.[1][2] Its US headquarters are located in Boston.[3][4][5] Since 2018, Mendix has been a Siemens subsidiary.[6][7]

History

Mendix was founded in Rotterdam, the Netherlands, by Roald Kruit, Derek Roos, and Derckjan Kruit. Roald, a freelance software developer at the time, noticed a communication disconnect between software developers and end users, which often led to dissatisfaction with the developed applications. Using a visual development language, Mendix's founders wanted to create a platform that would enable better collaboration and understanding between developers and business users.[8][9][5]

In October 2011, Mendix raised $13 million with its first round of venture capital funding.[10]

In August 2018, the company's co-founder and CEO announced its acquisition by Siemens or $730 million in cash.[11] The deal was finalized later that year. It was reported that Mendix would continue to operate as an independent entity. [12] Siemens customers can use Mendix to extend funcitionality of Siemens software and create their own applications on top of it, such as connecting various IT systems or tracking the production of products in various facilities.[13]

In February 2024, Raymond Kok was appointed as Mendix's new CEO.[14]

Features

Mendix aims to support the entire software development lifecycle (SDLC) with an integrated development environment (IDE) with tools for businesses to build, test, iterate, and deploy applications driven by a visual programming language.[15][16][17] Organizations can use their own or Mendix's servers to host their applications.[5] According to Roos, the platform should not replace professional programmers instead of promoting collaboration with them, as "[p]rofessional IT people supply the technical, low-coder the logistics theme".[5]

In 2014, Mendix introduced a free community edition of the platform without the private server deployment, app monitoring, backup, resource management, and enterprise support features.[18]

At CES 2024 in January 2024, Siemens and AWS announced they were integrating Mendix with Amazon Bedrock, a machine learning platform used to build generative artificial intelligence applications on AWS cloud computing platform.[19]

Reception

In 2016–2023, analyst firm Gartner named Mendix one of the leaders in its Magic Quadrant report for enterprise low-code application platforms.[20] In 2023, analyst firm Forrester named Mendix one of the leaders in "The Forrester Wave™: Low-Code Development Platforms for Professional Developers, Q2 2023" report.[21]

Mendix has partnered with other technology providers Red Hat[22][23] and AWS.[24][25]

References

  1. ^ "No-code/low-code: Why you should be paying attention", VentureBeat, 2021-02-14, retrieved 2023-08-17
  2. ^ "Enterprises are flocking to low-code tools, Mendix reports", VentureBeat, 2021-08-31, retrieved 2023-08-17
  3. ^ "Mendix Opens New Corporate Headquarters to Foster Growth and Innovation", Mendix, retrieved 2024-04-03
  4. ^ Michael B. Farrell, "App maker Mendix doubles size in Boston, expands overseas – The Boston Globe", BostonGlobe.com, retrieved 2024-04-03
  5. ^ a b c d Kutsche, Katharina (2020-05-05), "Programmieren mit Low Code – Apps aus dem Baukasten", Süddeutsche.de (in German), retrieved 2024-06-28
  6. ^ Lardinois, Frederic (2018-08-01), "Siemens acquires low-code platform Mendix for $700M", TechCrunch, retrieved 2023-05-15
  7. ^ "Siemens boosts low-code development play with Mendix buy | TechTarget", Software Quality, retrieved 2023-08-17
  8. ^ Rogers, Bruce, "Mendix CEO Derek Roos Disrupts Enterprise Application World", Forbes, retrieved 2024-01-16
  9. ^ "Siemens eyes IoT opportunity as it acquires low-code software developer Mendix", SiliconANGLE, 2018-08-01, retrieved 2024-04-03
  10. ^ Ludwig, Sean (2011-10-31), "Mendix grabs $13M to fuel fast enterprise app development", VentureBeat, retrieved 2024-01-16
  11. ^ Lardinois, Frederic (2018-08-01), "Siemens acquires low-code platform Mendix for $700M", TechCrunch, retrieved 2024-01-16
  12. ^ "Siemens boosts low-code development play with Mendix buy | TechTarget", Software Quality, retrieved 2024-05-16
  13. ^ "Handelsblatt", www.handelsblatt.com, retrieved 2024-06-28
  14. ^ Brooks, Steve (February 15, 2024), "Siemens appoints Raymond Kok as Mendix CEO", Enterprise Times, retrieved April 3, 2024
  15. ^ Technology, GlobalData (2021-09-16), "Low-code wars heat up over enhanced data integration consolidation", Verdict, retrieved 2024-04-03
  16. ^ "How low-code platforms are transforming software development", CIO, retrieved 2024-04-03
  17. ^ "Going cloud-native: How to develop better cloud apps | Computer Weekly", ComputerWeekly.com, retrieved 2024-04-04
  18. ^ Harris, Richard, "Mendix Announces Free Version of Enterprise App Platform as a Service", App Developer Magazine, retrieved 2024-04-03
  19. ^ "CES 2024: Siemens eyes up immersive tech, AI to enable industrial metaverse | Computer Weekly", ComputerWeekly.com, retrieved 2024-05-16
  20. ^ "Best Enterprise Low-Code Application Platforms Reviews 2024", Gartner Peer Insights, Gartner Inc., retrieved 2024-01-16
  21. ^ "The Forrester Wave™: Low-Code Development Platforms For...", Forrester, retrieved 2024-01-16
  22. ^ "Mendix and Red Hat to bring Cloud-Native Low-Code App Development to a 'new level'", Digitalisation World, 2023-10-16, retrieved 2024-04-04
  23. ^ "Low-code and open source", Community News, E3 Magazine, 2024-01-08, retrieved 2024-04-04
  24. ^ Wallen, Jack (2022-02-15), "AWS and Mendix Partner on Intelligent Automation Solutions", The New Stack, retrieved 2024-01-16
  25. ^ Plumb, Taryn (2022-02-16), "Mendix embraces low-code, adds 3 new products to AWS Marketplace", VentureBeat, retrieved 2024-01-16
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