Open Source Won’t Ruin Your Edge, It Might Be Your Edge

Open Source Won’t Ruin Your Edge, It Might Be Your Edge

If you’ve been following along with our new season of Conversations at the Edge (CATE), you know we’ve been digging deep into mobile robotics. In our first five episodes, we explored why MVPs (Minimum Viable Products) are a trap, why Raspberry Pi won’t get you to production, and how distributed intelligence is the secret sauce that makes robots safe, scalable, and adaptable in unpredictable environments.

Now, we’re shifting gears. The next three episodes zoom in on a topic every robotics developer has wrestled with: open source. Whether you’ve cursed it, praised it, or both in the same breath, open source is shaping how we design, scale, and secure mobile robots. So, let’s break down what we covered in this new segment and what it really means for developers.

Episode 6: Open Source is Gonna Kill My

We opened with a common fear: if I embrace open source, am I giving away my competitive edge? Will my IP leak into the wild and get reused by competitors?

The truth is, modern open source projects rely on permissive licenses. That means you control what’s shared and what stays private. At NXP, we live this balance every day. Our chips have specialized IP blocks that require proprietary drivers, but we also contribute to community code where it accelerates adoption and strengthens the ecosystem.

For developers, this is freedom. Use open source to skip reinventing the wheel (drivers for common sensors or connectivity stacks are already there!). Keep your differentiation in the layers that matter, whether it’s proprietary algorithms, unique hardware integrations, or vertical-specific applications. The bigger picture? You gain not just speed but robustness, because your code benefits from more eyes, more testing, and more compatibility with existing frameworks.

Watch the episode now >>

Episode 7: Open Source Means Less Secure

Another myth we had to bust is that open source is “less secure.” When you’re building mobile robots that inspect factories, navigate hospitals, or venture into nuclear power plants, security isn’t optional.

Here’s the reality: open source can actually improve security. Large communities mean more eyes on the code, which means vulnerabilities are often found and fixed faster than in closed environments. Pair that with security best practices at the hardware and system level, and you’ve got a strong foundation.

At NXP, our reference platforms for robotics ship with secure elements alongside the main processor. That gives each board unique certificates for authentication, anti-counterfeiting, and user verification. On top of that, developers still must meet tough standards like IEC 62443 and Europe’s Cyber Resiliency Act, and open source software doesn’t stop you from doing so.

Watch the episode now >>

Episode 8: Making Embedded Life Better for Linux Snobs Everywhere

Finally, we turn to a developer reality that really resonates with me . Many of us cut our teeth on Linux, and moving into embedded development can feel like a rude awakening. Different tools, different constraints, different mindset. But what if it didn’t have to be?

In this episode, we showed how modern RTOSes (real-time operating systems) like Zephyr and NuttX are making embedded life friendlier to Linux-native developers. Both are POSIX-compliant, which means their shells and commands look and feel familiar. Want to SSH into a battery management system running NuttX? You’ll feel right at home. Need to bring Cognitive Pilot model predictive control software over from one board to another? If both run Zephyr, the portability is seamless.

It’s more than comfort, though. With this portability and scalability you can architect your platform once and scale it across SKUs to save development time and enable your designs to adapt new capabilities once deployed. Add in the open source community constantly contributing drivers and features, and suddenly, embedded development doesn’t feel so foreign.

Watch the episode now >>

What’s Next

If there is one thread that ties everything, it’s that open source isn’t a liability, it’s a multiplier. It gives you compatibility, scalability, and even security, as long as you pair it with the right hardware and safety practices.

And we’re just getting started. In our next segment, we’ll bring in a special guest to dive into advances in sensor fusion and vision, and how the two technologies are redefining robot perception and environmental interaction.

Until then, catch up on all the episodes on nxp.com or on our YouTube channel, and stay tuned for more Conversations at the Edge!


Author | Sujata Neidig


Herve COVAREL

Digital Designer at NXP Semiconductors

3w

Next step is open source with AI.

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