Why model optionality matters, and the risk of locking your whole stack to one AI vendor — a Canadian buyer’s view.
dgm is an independent osFoundry integration partner — not affiliated with osFoundry’s maker (OS LLC), and dgm has no completed client integrations yet.
Locking your whole AI stack to one vendor is convenient until it is not. Multi-model flexibility is a hedge that matters more as AI moves fast.
The single-vendor appeal
One vendor means one invoice, one support contact and tight integration. It is the simplest path, and fine if that vendor’s models always meet your needs.
The multi-model case
Models change fast, prices shift, and different models are better at different tasks. A model-agnostic layer lets you route each task to the best or most cost-effective model and switch without re-platforming — a real hedge against lock-in.
Where osFoundry fits
osFoundry is built for this: bring your own keys across providers and route per request. osFoundry’s managed cloud pins data to US, EU or Japan — it does not currently offer a Canadian managed region. For data that must stay in Canada, the honest path is self-hosting osFoundry (BYO Cloud) inside a Canadian cloud region such as AWS Canada (Montréal/Calgary), Azure (Toronto/Quebec City) or Google Cloud (Montréal), or running models locally on-device. Pricing for both tools changes and varies by plan and usage — always check the official pricing page for current figures.
Where dgm fits
dgm is an independent integration partner that helps Canadian businesses adopt osFoundry — scoping a first use case, handling the build, and connecting AI to the systems you already run. dgm is independent of osFoundry’s maker (OS LLC) and has no completed client integrations yet, so everything described here is a service offered, not a past result. If you want to scope a practical first project, dgm can help you map it out.