| TI sees open source as a means to drive innovation, ultimately enabling
our customers to create market-leading devices that push the envelope
with performance and advanced capabilities. This site aims to help open
source developers find the resources needed to use TI’s platforms.
In addition, TI participates in a number of open source industry initiatives
and open source projects. Support for these communities is another example
of TI’s ability to deliver proven software solutions for all major
operating systems for portable electronics and advance the company’s
activity in the open source community.
| View TI open
source resources and projects: |
- OMAP™ Linux Community
– This site is a central resource for developers working
on Texas Instruments OMAP™
Processors and open source software. Use this site to find
mailing lists, sample code, documentation, Linux board support
packages, and other resources for a variety of OMAP-based platforms.
The Zoom Mobile Development Kit will be broadly available from
our distributors in April 2008. A limited number of MDK’s
are available now for a beta program we are conducting. We are
currently taking applications for those interested in being
part of the beta program. To apply for the beta program, please
fill out the form at http://www.openomap.org/beta.html.
- DaVinci™ Linux
Community - GStreamer is a pipeline-based multimedia framework
that allows you to create a variety of media-handling components,
including simple audio playback, audio and video playback, recording,
streaming, and editing. The pipeline design allows you to easily
write any type of streaming multimedia application. This software
release helps you leverage the DV-EVM software infrastructure
(Codec Engine, MV Linux LSP, DSP Codecs, etc.) in developing
open source GStreamer multimedia framework to DaVinci
digital media processors.
- DSDP Real-Time
Software Components (RTSC) Project - RTSC is a C-based programming
model for developing, delivering, and deploying real-time software
components targeted for diverse hardware platforms without compromising
system performance -- in short, higher-level programming and
higher-levels of performance. In addition to products like DSP/BIOS
and CodecEngine already supporting the software backplane, TI
has elected to "open-source" the underlying RTSC tooling
and infrastructure in the interest of a de-facto standard for
component-based software production and consumption for embedded
C programmers.
- View
other projects based on TI platforms on sourceforge.net
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