Migrating from scattered SaaS to osFoundry — what the service covers, how dgm delivers it through osFoundry, and how to arrange a first call.

dgm is an independent integration partner for osFoundry — it is not affiliated with osFoundry’s maker (OS LLC) and has not yet completed an integration project for any client.

Migrating from scattered SaaS to osFoundry — consolidating tools, knowledge and automation onto a single platform. dgm proposes a staged, measurable migration. osFoundry is a model-agnostic AI orchestration platform built on a bring-your-own-key (BYOK) principle: usage-based pricing with no per-user fee, local-first and self-hostable operation, the option to pin your data region (US, EU or Japan) or to deploy it inside your own private cloud.

What this service covers

  • Mapping your current stack
  • Identifying what can be consolidated
  • A staged migration
  • Measuring the saving

How dgm delivers it with osFoundry

dgm proposes to specialise in osFoundry and to walk you from the first step through to go-live. Where data residency matters, the honest path matters too: osFoundry pins your data region to the US, the EU or Japan, supports local-first inference on your own device, and lets you self-host it in your own AWS, Azure or Google Cloud account (BYO Cloud). osFoundry has an EU managed region but no managed region inside South Africa. The honest difference from many markets is that South Africa does have in-country hyperscaler regions — AWS Africa (Cape Town) af-south-1, Microsoft Azure South Africa North in Johannesburg, Google Cloud africa-south1 in Johannesburg and Oracle Cloud Johannesburg — so keeping data on South African soil is achievable by self-hosting osFoundry in one of those regions or in a local data centre, or by running it local-first. Note that the US CLOUD Act can compel a US-owned provider to produce data it controls regardless of where that data physically sits, which is why some organisations prefer self-hosting or local-first for their most sensitive workloads.

On regulation, the position in South Africa is straightforward to state plainly. There is no AI-specific regulator for this sector and no binding, horizontal AI law in force in South Africa; you are governed by POPIA (Act 4 of 2013) and the applicable sector rules. Always confirm the current position with the relevant authority before you act.

Why dgm

dgm is an independent integration partner — it operates separately from osFoundry’s maker (OS LLC). It has not yet completed an integration project for any client, so everything described here is a proposed service rather than a delivered outcome. The approach is model-agnostic, transparent, and designed to sit within South Africa’s rules, with personal information handled under the Protection of Personal Information Act (POPIA) and the relevant sector requirements.

What you get / next step

To weigh up a practical first step, start with a short introductory call. Together dgm would assess whether the osFoundry platform suits your organisation and settle on a small, measurable place to begin.

Where dgm comes in

dgm is an independent integration partner that helps organisations in South Africa adopt the osFoundry platform — from identifying the first practical use case, to setting it up, to connecting AI to the systems you already run. To weigh up a practical first step, start with a short introductory call. dgm operates separately from osFoundry’s maker (OS LLC) and has not yet completed an integration project for any client, so everything above is a proposed service rather than a delivered outcome. If you would like to weigh up a practical first step, dgm would be glad to think it through with you. Arrange an introductory call with dgm.