
Webrix
KlavisAI
Docker
Google App Engine
Salesforce Platform
Dokku
Heroku
AWS Lambda
AWS Elastic Beanstalk
Google Cloud Functions
Azure Web Apps
Webrix MCP Gateway is enterprise infrastructure for secure AI adoption. It provides a centralized MCP gateway connecting AI agents (Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor) to internal tools (Jira, GitHub, Slack, databases) with SSO authentication, RBAC, audit logging, and guardrails. Employees get instant self-service access to approved tools while security teams maintain full visibility and control. Deploy on-premise, cloud, or SaaS.
Webrix
Google App EngineGoogle App Engine is recommended for developers building web applications who prefer a Platform as a Service (PaaS) model, startups who need a solution that can grow with them without worrying about scaling issues, teams wanting to leverage Google's robust data and analytics offerings, and businesses that require a global reach with reliable performance.
No Webrix videos yet. You could help us improve this page by suggesting one.
Webrix's answer
Webrix is the only enterprise MCP Gateway built specifically for AI adoption at scale. Unlike generic API management or agent platforms, we provide purpose-built infrastructure that connects any MCP-compatible AI agent to internal systems through a single secure gateway. Our architecture is built on the open Model Context Protocol standard (avoiding vendor lock-in), provides enterprise-grade security controls from day one (SSO, RBAC, audit trails), and enables self-service tool access without IT bottlenecks. We solve the last-mile problem that blocks AI adoption: giving employees instant, secure access to the internal tools their AI agents need.
Webrix's answer
Webrix's answer
AI adoption leaders, VPs of Engineering, CTOs, and technical decision-makers at mid-to-large enterprises (500-5,000+ employees) that build software in-house. These organizations have strong technical capabilities, existing internal tools that need AI integration, and security/compliance requirements that prevent ad-hoc AI tool adoption. Secondary audiences include security teams evaluating POCs, engineering teams wanting faster AI tool access, and IT leaders needing visibility into AI usage and ROI.
Webrix's answer
Webrix was founded by developers who saw the same pattern repeating across enterprises: employees wanted to use AI tools like Claude, Cursor, and ChatGPT with their internal systems, but security teams had to block access because there was no safe way to connect AI agents to Jira, GitHub, databases, and internal APIs. IT teams were drowning in access requests while developers worked around restrictions. We built Webrix to solve this fundamental infrastructure gap - providing the secure gateway layer that enterprises need to actually adopt AI at scale without compromising security, compliance, or control.
Webrix's answer
Kubernetes for container orchestration, Helm for deployment management, Docker for containerization, and the Model Context Protocol (MCP) as the core standard for agent-tool communication. Our gateway runs on cloud-native infrastructure with support for PostgreSQL for session management, integrates with standard identity providers (Okta, Azure AD, Google Workspace) for SSO, and uses industry-standard security practices including secrets management, and audit logging.
Webrix's answer
Based on our record, Google App Engine seems to be more popular. It has been mentiond 33 times since March 2021. We are tracking product recommendations and mentions on various public social media platforms and blogs. They can help you identify which product is more popular and what people think of it.
Google App Engine (GAE) -- the "OG" serverless platform that launched back in 2008 & somewhat modernized in 2018; uses customized, proprietary containers, free static file edge-caching, and generous outbound networking free tier. - Source: dev.to / 8 months ago
Google App Engine - Google's fully managed platform for building scalable web and mobile backends. - Source: dev.to / about 1 year ago
If Google App Engine (GAE) is the "OG" serverless platform, Cloud Run (GCR) is its logical successor, crafted for today's modern app-hosting needs. GAE was the 1st generation of Google serverless platforms. It has since been joined, about a decade later, by 2nd generation services, GCR and Cloud Functions (GCF). GCF is somewhat out-of-scope for this post so I'll cover that another time. - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
As Windsales Inc. expands, it adopts a PaaS model to offload server and runtime management, allowing its developers and engineers to focus on code development and deployment. By partnering with providers like Heroku and Google App Engine, Windsales Inc. Accesses a fully managed runtime environment. This choice relieves Windsales Inc. Of managing servers, OS updates, or runtime environment behavior. Instead,... - Source: dev.to / over 1 year ago
Google App Engine (GAE) is their original serverless solution and first cloud product, launching in 2008 (video), giving rise to Serverless 1.0 and the cloud computing platform-as-a-service (PaaS) service level. It didn't do function-hosting nor was the concept of containers mainstream yet. GAE was specifically for (web) app-hosting (but also supported mobile backends as well). - Source: dev.to / almost 2 years ago
KlavisAI - Klavis AI is open source MCP integration plaforms that let AI agents use tools reliably at any scale. You can use our API to automate workflows across multiple apps with managed authentications.
Salesforce Platform - Salesforce Platform is a comprehensive PaaS solution that paves the way for the developers to test, build, and mitigate the issues in the cloud application before the final deployment.
Docker - Docker is an open platform that enables developers and system administrators to create distributed applications.
Dokku - Docker powered mini-Heroku in around 100 lines of Bash