In the fifth blog in our series of five, we lay out options for hosting your OpenTAP plugin -- self-hosting and contributing the plugin to the OpenTAP project -- and for distribution, either as open source or closed source/proprietary software.
In the fifth blog in our series of five, we lay out options for hosting your OpenTAP plugin -- self-hosting and contributing the plugin to the OpenTAP project -- and for distribution, either as open source or closed source/proprietary software.
In the fourth blog in our series of five, we’ll examine how dependencies on software outside OpenTAP and beyond your plugin itself can impact your choice of license. We’ll also pose some important questions for you and your organization regarding the status of the intellectual property in your plugin.
Choosing a license for your OpenTAP plugin should not be a daunting task. However, there are key considerations you need to address regarding your plugin itself and your goals in creating and distributing it. In the third blog in our series of five, we’ll lay out key considerations for choosing a license in support of both business and technical goals.
In the second blog in our series of five, we’ll provide an overview of software licensing concepts, explain how OpenTAP itself is licensed, and lay out key considerations for choosing a license.
This blog is the first in a series of five that examines licensing and distribution options for plugins for OpenTAP. Plugins are created by the gamut of OpenTAP ecosystem participants – OpenTAP users, integrators and other third-parties, as well as by Keysight – and expand the functionality of the platform and accommodate different hardware configurations. If you’ve created an OpenTAP plugin, it merits thoughtful consideration of licensing and distribution options.
Keysight customers, partners and members of the test and measurement ecosystem – anyone who needs a modern, mature and reusable test automation platform – should evaluate OpenTAP. It's easy-to-use, standards-based, modular and open source, with OEM-friendly licensing. It has a global ecosystem of users, integrators and other partners and is composed of high quality code. Read more . . .
This blog describes interesting applications of OpenTAP that fall outside of commercial test automation. The intent of this blog (and the project it describes) is to provide a unique path to automate your residence using OpenTAP.
OpenTAP makes it easy!
The Open Compute Project Foundation (OCP) was initiated in 2011 with a mission to apply the benefits of open source and open collaboration to hardware to rapidly increase the pace of innovation in, near and around the data center.
Data Science is one of the most exciting fields of this century, uncovering mysteries and gaining knowledge from existing and emerging data. However, only until quite recently was data science able to demonstrate its full power.