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A display of JPI avionics. J.P. Instruments is an American aircraft avionics manufacturer. [1] The company was founded in Santa Ana, California marketing its first product, "The Scanner", to monitor engine temperatures in piston engine aircraft. In 1992, JPI came out with the EDM-500 which electronically monitors and stores engine parameters. [2]
In 1989, HP developed their TML language [10] which was the forerunner to SCPI. The IEC developed their own standards in parallel with the IEEE, with IEC 60625-2-1993 (IEC 625). In 2004, the IEEE and IEC combined their respective standards into a "dual logo" IEEE/IEC standard IEC 60488-2-2004 , Part 2: Codes, Formats, Protocols and Common ...
In addition to the hardware bus to control an instrument, software for the PC is also needed. Virtual Instrument Software Architecture, or VISA, was developed by the VME eXtensions for Instrumentation (VXI) plug and play Systems Alliance as a specification for I/O software. VISA was a step toward industry-wide software compatibility.
An instrument driver, in the context of test and measurement (T&M) application development, is a set of software routines that simplifies remote instrument control. Instrument drivers are specified by the IVI Foundation [1] and define an I/O abstraction layer using the virtual instrument software architecture (VISA). The VISA hardware ...
Virtual instrument software architecture (VISA) is a widely used application programming interface (API) in the test and measurement (T&M) industry for communicating with instruments from a computer. VISA is an industry standard implemented by several T&M companies, such as, Anritsu , Bustec , Keysight Technologies , Kikusui, National ...
JPI may refer to: Pope John Paul I (1912–1978) Java Platform Interface; Jeju Peace Institute, a South Korean think tank; Jinnah Polytechnic Institute, in Faisalabad, Punjab, Pakistan; Joint Programming Initiative by the European Commission; Journal of Political Ideologies; J.P. Instruments, American avionics manufacturer
Hooking – range of techniques used to alter or augment the behavior of an operating system, of applications, or of other software components by intercepting function calls or messages or events passed between software components. Instruction set simulator – simulation of all instructions at machine code level to provide instrumentation
Derive was a computer algebra system, developed as a successor to muMATH by the Soft Warehouse in Honolulu, Hawaii, now owned by Texas Instruments. Derive was implemented in muLISP , also by Soft Warehouse. The first release was in 1988 for DOS. [2] It was discontinued on June 29, 2007, in favor of the TI-Nspire CAS.