OpenKit, an open-source social platform for mobile games, is now open to all developers, according to co-founder Peter Relan.?The service, first announced in December,?has been in private beta since earlier this year. There are apparently 1,500 developers already testing the service.
Relan previously told me that he started OpenKit in response to the shutdown of OpenFeint, the GREE-acquired social platform for mobile games that he co-founded. Developers still need something like this, Relan said, and he wants to build it in a way that?s both ?good business and developer friendly.?
OpenKit?s current features include cloud storage (allowing a player to save their game on one device and load it on another), leaderboards and achievements, user authentication (for Facebook, Google+ and Twitter), and plug-ins that connect games with the Unity engine. Plus, it works on both iOS and Android, and it?s being developed as an open-source project, so developers can always take their data elsewhere or use the code to build their own backend service.
OpenKit isn?t live for players yet. Relan told me today that that?s coming in a couple of months. There are more social features planned, but he said he?s specifically waiting to integrate with the Google Games service that?s rumored for the Google I/O conference next week.
OpenKit is the industry?s first completely open platform for backend services for mobile developers, with a guarantee of ?no lock-in of developer data.? With OpenKit, developers get an open source toolkit on iOS and Android to plug into backend services critical to apps in the post-PC era: common services for all types of apps, including a universal account authorization service and a cloud storage service, plus app-specific services such as leaderboards/achievements for game developers. OpenKit?s open architecture give developers the...
? Learn moreFounder and CEO of Business Signatures: In 2002, Peter embarked on building a behavior based fraud detection technology based on ?real time stream processing? databases, used to prevent online consumer fraud. Financiers were angels including Ram Shriram, angel investor in Google, and Dave Roux, co-CEO of Silver Lake Partners, and subsequently Texas Pacific Group Venture and Walden International. Business Signatures was sold to Entrust in 2006, a public company in the security software space. Peter served as the President...
? Learn moreSource: http://techcrunch.com/2013/05/10/openkit-opens/
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