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11 Open Source
Open source software
This television contains open source software.
TP Vision Europe B.V. hereby offers to deliver,
upon request, a copy of the complete
corresponding source code for the copyrighted
open source software packages used in this
product for which such offer is requested by the
respective licences.
This offer is valid up to three years after product
purchase to anyone in receipt of this
information.
To obtain the source code, please write in
English to .
. .
Open source license statement
Acknowledgements and License Texts for any
open source software used in this Philips TV.
This is a document describing the distribution of
the source code used on the Philips TV, which
fall either under the GNU General Public
License (the GPL), or the GNU Lesser General
Public License (the LGPL), or any other open
source license. Instructions to obtain source
code for this software can be found in the user
manual.
PHILIPS MAKES NO WARRANTIES
WHATSOEVER,EITHER EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING ANY WARRANTIES
OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE, REGARDING THIS
SOFTWARE. Philips offers no support for this
software. The preceding does not affect your
warranties and statutory rights regarding any
Philips product(s) you purchased. It only applies
to this source code made available to you.
U-Boot - Universal Bootloader (2010 06)
U-Boot, a boot loader for Embedded boards
based on PowerPC, ARM, MIPS and several
other processors, which can be installed in a
boot ROM and used to initialize and test the
hardware or to download and run application
code.
Source:
http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot/
udev – Userspace Device Management
Daemon (164.0) This program creates the files
for devices on a Linux system for easier
management. udev is a program which
dynamically creates and removes device nodes
from /dev/. It responds to /sbin/hotplug device
events and requires a 2.6 kernel.
Source:
https://launchpad.net/udev
Util-Linux (2.22-rc2)
Source:
https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/
Linux Kernel (3.10)
Real-Time Operating System
Source:
http://www.kernel.org/
BusyBox (1.16.1)
BusyBox combines tiny versions of many
common UNIX utilities into a single small
executable. It provides replacements for most of
the utilities you usually find in GNU fileutils,
shellutils, etc. The utilities in BusyBox generally
have fewer options than their full-featured GNU
cousins; however, the options that are included
provide the expected functionality and behave
very much like their GNU counterparts.
BusyBox provides a fairly complete environment
for any small or embedded system.
Source:
http://busybox.net/
Ext2 Filesystems Utilities (1.41.11)
The Ext2 Filesystem Utilities (e2fsprogs) contain
all of the standard utilities for creating,
fixing,configuring, and debugging ext2
filesystems.
Source:
http://e2fsprogs.sourceforge.net/e2fsprogs-relea
se.html#1.41.12
GDB - The GNU Project Debugger (6.8)
GDB allows you to see what is going on "inside"
another program while it executes - or what
another program was doing at the moment it
crashed. GDB can do four main kinds of things
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