Rajesh Subramaniam is Founder and CEO of embedUR systems.

Over the past couple of decades, the networking industry faced a choice: Companies could keep writing their own proprietary operating systems from scratch, or they could adopt an open-source, free platform that everybody could build on together.

Linux won that argument, since it gave engineers all the tools they needed without asking them to reinvent an entire operating system just to ship a product. Linux became the dominant substrate for networking hardware, and both R&D and customer licensing costs dropped significantly across the industry.​

We are watching that same story play out again today, this time in real-time operating systems.​

Why RTOS Consolidation Is Happening Now

A real-time operating system (RTOS) is the software that runs inside small electronic devices and controls how they respond to events. It has to respond fast enough when timing is critical, such as in a car’s airbag controller or a pacemaker. These systems typically run on small, low-power chips built for resource-constrained devices: sensors, wearables, industrial controllers, medical equipment and the broader universe of connected gadgets we call the intelligent edge.

​As IoT deployments scale into billions of devices, the industry is coalescing around a smaller number of standard platforms, instead of the fragmented landscape of proprietary, one-off systems that once defined this space. Software complexity keeps climbing, and managing that complexity is only realistic when teams unify around a shared system instead of maintaining dozens of incompatible ones.

​Even the smallest embedded devices are getting pulled into this shift, and many are picking up AI models that now run directly at the edge. That means these devices need model security and memory optimization built in because power and memory are scarce on hardware this small.

​Open platforms like FreeRTOS and Zephyr have emerged as the leading contenders in this shift, with Zephyr in particular gaining momentum against long-established proprietary systems like VxWorks. Hosted by the Linux Foundation, this software is open-source, free and vendor-neutral. As a result, it is becoming for connected devices what Linux became for servers and the cloud, and companies are already using it in things like smart sensors, industrial gateways, battery-powered trackers and connected medical devices.

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