Ditto builds a mobile database designed for edge devices that operate without cloud or WiFi. The stack reveals a sophisticated systems engineering org—heavy on low-level connectivity (C++, Rust, Bluetooth Low Energy, WebAssembly) paired with Kubernetes orchestration and observability tooling (Datadog, Prometheus, Grafana)—tackling hard problems in peer-to-peer sync, unreliable networks, and device interference. Active adoption of Bluetooth Low Energy and OIDC, combined with projects targeting protocol expansion and low-latency P2P communication, signals a company solving for increasingly demanding edge deployments.
Ditto provides a mobile database engineered for offline-first and offline-capable applications. The product enables field teams, retail operations, and distributed services to function reliably without persistent connectivity, syncing data peer-to-peer across devices once reconnected. The company targets mid-market and enterprise customers operating in connectivity-constrained environments—field service, logistics, retail, healthcare. Core projects span native bridge implementations, observability and monitoring infrastructure, and a no-code AI-enabled app builder to lower integration friction. Engineering-heavy hiring (14 of 16 active roles) reflects the technical depth required to solve reliability, latency, and protocol challenges across iOS, Android, and web platforms.
Ditto's stack includes C++, Rust, Kotlin, iOS, and Android for core development; Kubernetes, Terraform, and Helm for infrastructure; and Datadog, Prometheus, Grafana for observability. They also use AWS, GCP, and Azure for cloud deployments.
Current projects include native bridge implementations, observability solutions, protocol expansion, low-latency peer-to-peer communication, a no-code AI app builder, and improvements to data sync and query optimization for offline-capable environments.
Other companies in the same industry, closest in size