Pydantic-deepagents is a a framework for the faster creation of agents using the PydatnicAI framework.
We lead Open-Source Agentic AI initiatives to share our expertise and support the worldwide developer community in building business solutions that solve problems once deemed unsolvable
Open-Source software is a reliable way to share and build top-tier technologies, with the worldwide community overseeing the code, improving it and applying it in a plethora of business and research projects.
Vstorm leads Agentic AI projects to build a better environment and more robust toolset to deliver more reliability and efficiency to business leaders and tech challengers.
Vstorm engages in the Open-Source community as creators, supporters, and thought leaders.
Vstorm actively supports the development of leading Agentic AI frameworks and technologies, including PydanticAI and LangChain.
Our team actively leads open-source projects used by world AI leaders and global tech companies.
Vstorm is the first AI Consultancy accepted as a member of Agentic AI Foundation, an institution that aims to shape the future of AI Agents as technology that transforms the world into a better place.
Over 700 stars from an international community of independent developers
We contribute to leading Agentic AI technologies
Our code is shared, used and updated, remaining a living part of the ecosystem
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Check out our Open-Source initiatives and the projects our engineers lead to get a grasp of our scope of interest in the field of Agentic AI.
Pydantic-deepagents is a a framework for the faster creation of agents using the PydatnicAI framework.
Fastapi Fullstack is a production-Ready Template for AI/LLM Applications: FastAPI + Next.js + 20+ Integrations. Vstorm plans to expand focus on developer tooling.
Curated collection of PydanticAI usage examples, along with documentation, used as a reference point.
Pydantic-ai-middleware is a general abstraction layer for middleware that can support e.g., guardrails. Vstorm will identify core elements that could be integrated with PydanticAI in the future.
Open source means our source code is publicly accessible for anyone to inspect, modify, and enhance. Instead of a “black box” proprietary system, we provide full transparency. This allows for a collaborative environment where developers worldwide can contribute improvements, ensuring the software remains robust, secure, and community-driven.
Yes. Most open-source licenses (like MIT, Apache 2.0, or GPL) allow you to use the software for commercial purposes. You can build products, provide services, or run business operations using our code without paying licensing fees. We only ask that you adhere to the specific attribution requirements outlined in our license file.
Often, open source is more secure than proprietary software. Because the code is public, a global community of “many eyes” can audit it for vulnerabilities. This transparency leads to faster identification and patching of security flaws. However, security also depends on you keeping your version up to date and following best practices for implementation.
Yes, open-source software is typically free of licensing fees, but “free” means freedom to use, study, modify, and share rather than zero cost. Some open-source software supports paid services or enterprise versions. Commercial use is explicitly allowed in most cases.
Copyleft requires that derivative works remain open source under the same license, ensuring ongoing freedom. GPL is the classic copyleft license, preventing proprietary forks. It contrasts with permissive licenses like Apache 2.0.
They overlap but differ philosophically: free software (per Free Software Foundation) prioritizes user freedoms, while open-source software (OSS) focuses on practical benefits. Most OSS is free software, but not vice versa due to license wording.
Yes, most OSS licenses allow modifications for personal or commercial use. However, redistribution often requires sharing your changes under compatible terms. Contributor agreements may apply for upstream submissions.
These are contracts where contributors grant project maintainers rights to their code, beyond the OSS license. They protect projects without overriding openness. Examples include Apache CLA or dual-licensing setups.
Support comes from communities, forums, documentation, and paid vendors. Projects like Linux have enterprise backing from Canonical or IBM. Popularity correlates with robust ecosystems.
Yes, OSS supports digital sovereignty with auditable code and no vendor dependence. EU states favor it for interoperability and cost efficiency. Examples include France’s OSOR portal.
Book your free consultation and see how we can support you in solving your business problems and overcoming challenges.