Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Gravio is an IoT and edge integration platform developed by ASTERIA Corporation. According to its download page, its core components are Gravio HubKit, Gravio Studio, and Gravio Cloud: HubKit is deployed on nodes such as PCs or servers and handles event management and Action execution; Studio is a GUI application for configuring HubKit and creating Actions; Cloud is used for backing up settings, downloading extensions, and managing rented devices.
HubKit includes a built-in event management module that can handle changes in data input/output states and start periodic batch processing on a schedule. Its Action engine can execute user-created Action programs. For device connectivity, the page explicitly mentions collecting data from various sensors via serial communication and WiFi networks, with support for Zigbee and EnOcean communication standards. Platform support is broad: HubKit can run on macOS, Windows 11, Linux x64/arm64, and supports Raspberry Pi and NVIDIA Jetson; Studio supports Windows 11 and macOS. Different versions have clear hardware and system requirements—for example, Linux requires Ubuntu 22.04/24.04 LTS, while macOS requires version 10.15 or later and Apple Silicon.
Although the captured page includes a Pricing navigation item, it does not show specific prices, plans, or free quotas, so it is not possible to assess its value ceiling. The page also does not state whether the product is open source, nor does it disclose a public API/SDK. In terms of documentation, the site provides Getting Started, HubKit Manual, Coordinator Manual, FAQ, an official supported sensor list, and installation instructions, giving users a reasonably complete set of entry points. However, the main content mixes English and Japanese, which may increase the evaluation effort for Chinese-speaking teams.
Its strengths are a clear edge deployment model, broad hardware coverage, IoT-oriented sensor connectivity, and GUI tools that lower the configuration barrier. Its weaknesses are the lack of transparency around pricing, APIs, and open-source status, while upgrades from older Windows versions may require manual uninstallation. Gravio is better suited to teams that need to build IoT edge nodes on Raspberry Pi, Jetson, PCs, or servers, and want to configure sensor data flows and automation actions through a graphical interface.
The page does not provide information about access from mainland China, payment methods, or localized services, so real-world network connectivity and payment support need further verification. If you need a more open or community-driven solution, compare it with Node-RED, ThingsBoard, or Home Assistant; if you prefer a cloud-vendor ecosystem, consider AWS IoT Greengrass or Azure IoT Edge.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on gravio.com official site.
gravio.com is an Japan API & Data provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 8.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach gravio.com directly.