FierceWirelessFierceWirelessEuropeFierceDeveloperFierceMobileContentFierceBroadbandWirelessFierceVoIPFierceIPTVFierceTelecomFierceOnlineVideoFierceCable

Free Newsletter

About | View Sample | Privacy

Network Test Automation Forum addresses time to market pressures

Tools

A coalition of service providers, network infrastructure and testing vendors joined forces to launch the Network Test Automation Forum (NTAF), an organization centered on promoting interoperability between test tools and simplifying lab automation efforts for both network equipment providers and their service provider customers.

Initial members of the NTAF include a representatives from the service provider community (BT and Verizon), traditional equipment (Cisco and Ericsson) and of course test/measurement (BreakingPoint Systems, Empirix, EXFO, Fanfare Software, Ixia, JDSU, and Spirent Communications) segments.

Traditionally, vendor and even service provider testing environments were done in a proprietary and standalone fashion, a process that would require months of testing before a product or service could be released into the market. NTAF aims to break that cycle with an open approach that encourages equipment vendors to work more closely with their respective service provider and network equipment provider (NEP) customers to create an open and advanced automation framework. By adopting multi-vendor technical architectures for test automation systems, test engineers and lab managers will be able to shorten the window of time to release new products and services.

For more:
- see the release here (pdf)


SHARE
WITH:
Email Twitter Facebook LinkedIn StumbleUpon
Get Your FREE FierceTelecom Email Newsletter:

Be the first to comment
More stories about Network Infrastructure   JDSU   Network Equipment Provider  

Comments

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

More information about formatting options

CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.