17
Open Source
17.1
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 .
. .
17.2
Open Source License
About Open Source License
README for the source code of the parts of TP Vision
Netherlands B.V. TV software that fall under open
source licenses.
This is a document describing the distribution of the
source code used on the TP Vision Netherlands B.V.
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 copies of this software can be
found in the Directions For Use.
TP Vision Netherlands B.V. MAKES NO WARRANTIES
WHATSOEVER, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED,
INCLUDING ANY WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
PURPOSE, REGARDING THIS SOFTWARE. TP Vision
Netherlands B.V. offers no support for this software.
The preceding does not affect your warranties and
statutory rights regarding any TP Vision Netherlands
B.V. product(s) you purchased. It only applies to this
source code made available to you.
Open Source
uboot loader
Source:
http://www.denx.de/wiki/U-Boot
busybox (v1.23.2)
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:
libz (1.2.8)
zlib is designed to be a free, general-purpose, legally
unencumbered -- that is, not covered by any patents
-- lossless data-compression library for use on
virtually any computer hardware and operating
system. The zlib data format is itself portable across
platforms.
Source:
libcurl (7.49.1)
libcurl is a free and easy-to-use client-side URL
transfer library, supporting DICT, FILE, FTP, FTPS,
Gopher, HTTP, HTTPS, IMAP, IMAPS, LDAP, LDAPS,
POP3, POP3S, RTMP, RTSP, SCP, SFTP, SMTP,
SMTPS, Telnet and TFTP. libcurl supports SSL
certificates, HTTP POST, HTTP PUT, FTP uploading,
HTTP form based upload, proxies, cookies,
user+password authentication (Basic, Digest, NTLM,
Negotiate, Kerberos), file transfer resume, http proxy
tunneling and more.
Source:
log4c (1.2.1)
Apache log4cxx is a logging framework for C++
patterned after Apache log4j, which uses Apache
Portable Runtime for most platform-specific code
and should be usable on any platform supported by
APR. Apache log4cxx is licensed under the Apache
License, an open source license certified by the Open
Source Initiative.
Source:
https://logging.apache.org/log4cxx/latest_stable/
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