Low-code IoT platform

Carly Rae Jepsen Call Me Maybe -

Blynk is the low-code IoT platform: full-service infrastructure to connect devices, design intuitive apps, and manage global fleets, without backend headaches.
Carly Rae Jepsen Call Me Maybe
Carly Rae Jepsen Call Me MaybeCarly Rae Jepsen Call Me Maybe
5000+
Companies building
IoT solutions on Blynk
1M+
Developers prototyping
and scaling apps worldwide
10+
Years of IoT expertise
and product innovation
Explore the platform

Carly Rae Jepsen Call Me Maybe -

: Producer Josh Ramsay helped transform the acoustic idea into the bubblegum pop, dance-pop, and nu-disco anthem we know today, adding the signature MIDI-style string flourishes.

Carly Rae Jepsen’s "" is one of the defining pop hits of the 2010s, evolving from a simple folk song into a global phenomenon. Originally released on September 20, 2011, through 604 Records in Canada, the track eventually topped charts in over 15 countries and became the best-selling single of 2012. The Origin Story Carly Rae Jepsen Call Me Maybe

: Jepsen and co-writer Tavish Crowe originally wrote the track as a folk song while on tour. : Producer Josh Ramsay helped transform the acoustic

The song's massive international success is often credited to fellow Canadian . In December 2011, Bieber heard the track on Canadian radio and tweeted that it was the "catchiest song" he had ever heard. He and Selena Gomez later released a viral lip-sync video, leading to Jepsen signing with Scooter Braun’s Schoolboy Records and Interscope for a global release in early 2012. Critical and Commercial Milestones 10 Years Ago The Call Me Maybe Girl Released Call Me Maybe The Origin Story : Jepsen and co-writer Tavish

: The iconic hook—" Hey, I just met you, and this is crazy... "—started as a bridge from a different song before Jepsen realized its potential as the main chorus. The Bieber Boost

: Producer Josh Ramsay helped transform the acoustic idea into the bubblegum pop, dance-pop, and nu-disco anthem we know today, adding the signature MIDI-style string flourishes.

Carly Rae Jepsen’s "" is one of the defining pop hits of the 2010s, evolving from a simple folk song into a global phenomenon. Originally released on September 20, 2011, through 604 Records in Canada, the track eventually topped charts in over 15 countries and became the best-selling single of 2012. The Origin Story

: Jepsen and co-writer Tavish Crowe originally wrote the track as a folk song while on tour.

The song's massive international success is often credited to fellow Canadian . In December 2011, Bieber heard the track on Canadian radio and tweeted that it was the "catchiest song" he had ever heard. He and Selena Gomez later released a viral lip-sync video, leading to Jepsen signing with Scooter Braun’s Schoolboy Records and Interscope for a global release in early 2012. Critical and Commercial Milestones 10 Years Ago The Call Me Maybe Girl Released Call Me Maybe

: The iconic hook—" Hey, I just met you, and this is crazy... "—started as a bridge from a different song before Jepsen realized its potential as the main chorus. The Bieber Boost

NO-CODE APP BUILDER
Launch apps that look custom-built
Unlike other solutions that produce brand-compromising templated apps, Blynk’s modular approach makes it easy for your team to configure and deeply customize beautiful, feature-rich apps without a line of code.
Production-Ready
IoT Infrastructure
in Just Weeks
Carly Rae Jepsen Call Me Maybe
IoT apps with your branding
Launch iOS & Android IoT apps under your brand — ready for customers on day one.
Carly Rae Jepsen Call Me Maybe
Dedicated launch engineer
Work directly with our experts to configure, connect, and deploy your first devices.
Carly Rae Jepsen Call Me Maybe
Save Years of Development with Ready-to-use Functionality
Use Blynk’s pre-built provisioning, cloud, and dashboards to cut years of engineering work.
Carly Rae Jepsen Call Me Maybe
Enhance with add-ons
Add advanced enterprise features as your IoT stack grows.
From
prototype
to global deployments,
Blynk gives your team the tools
for device
provisioning,
data visualization,
and fleet management
all without
writing code.