Skip to main content
  1. Blog
  2. Article

Canonical
on 4 April 2017

Nexiona collaborates with Canonical and Dell to create MIIMETIQ Edge


There is a perception that IoT projects are complex, expensive and therefore limited to larger companies that have the means to manage them. However, the reality is very different. Nexiona, creators of IoT technology for system integrators, has developed a package that’s affordable to all company sizes – with a process that’s simple enough for any system integrator to install.

The package is an all-in-one IoT solution within a single box. It combines Nexiona’s MIIMETIQ EDGE platform, Dell’s robust and affordable hardware and Ubuntu’s secure and well-known OS that easily adapts to enterprise – a solution unlike anything else on the market.

Learn more about the product, how it can benefit your SME and it’s presence in various market sectors in the case study below.

Download the case study

Related posts


Massimiliano Gori
27 March 2026

Modern Linux identity management: from local auth to the cloud with Ubuntu

Cloud and server Article

The modern enterprise operates in a hybrid world where on-premises infrastructure coexists with cloud services, and security threats evolve daily. IT administrators are tasked with a difficult balancing act: maintaining traditional local workflows while managing the inevitable shift toward cloud-native architectures. Identity has emerged ...


Abdelrahman Hosny
24 March 2026

Canonical welcomes NVIDIA’s donation of the GPU DRA driver to CNCF

Partners Article

At KubeCon Europe in Amsterdam, NVIDIA announced that it will donate the GPU Dynamic Resource Allocation (DRA) Driver to the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). This marks an important milestone for the Kubernetes ecosystem and for the future of AI infrastructure. For years, GPUs have been central to modern machine learning and high ...


ijlal-loutfi
23 March 2026

Hot code burns: the supply chain case for letting your containers cool before you ship

Ubuntu Article

Zero CVEs doesn’t mean secure. It means unexamined. New code has zero CVEs because no one has studied it yet, and if you’re rebuilding nightly from upstream, you’re signing first and asking questions later. In software supply chain security, the freshest code isn’t always the safest. Sometimes the most secure component in your pipeline is ...