Skip to content

Commit 383e1da

Browse files
author
Simon Horman
committed
doc: move attribution to top of blueprint document
Attribution was split between the top and the bottom of the document. It seems clearer to gather it together at the top. Signed-off-by: Simon Horman <simon.horman@redhat.com>
1 parent a9eaf54 commit 383e1da

File tree

1 file changed

+2
-5
lines changed

1 file changed

+2
-5
lines changed

Docs/blueprint_framework.md

Lines changed: 2 additions & 5 deletions
Original file line numberDiff line numberDiff line change
@@ -2,7 +2,8 @@
22

33
Framework & FAQ
44

5-
Prepared for the OPI Technical Steering Committee
5+
Prepared by WorldTech IT for the OPI Technical Steering Committee.\
6+
Josh Brooks, Chief Solutions Architect | josh@worldtechit.com
67

78
## What is an OPI Blueprint (Intent and Goals)?
89

@@ -35,7 +36,3 @@ Blueprints have both a physical and digital home: **OPI Lab (Physical/Virtual).*
3536
## Does OPI have a preference for one Blueprint over the other?
3637

3738
OPI does not mandate a ranked priority list, but there are practical factors that make some Blueprints more strategically valuable than others: **Multi-vendor interoperability.** Blueprints that demonstrate OPI working across multiple member vendors’ hardware and software (e.g., Dell chassis \+ Intel IPU \+ F5 BIG-IP Next \+ Red Hat OpenShift) are highly valued because they reinforce OPI’s core value proposition of vendor neutrality. **Actively maintained components.** The TSC is currently working through a source audit and supportability assessment to understand which OPI components are actively maintained and on what hardware. Blueprints built on well-supported components with clear community or vendor backing will be prioritized. **Customer demand signal.** Blueprints that address use cases with known enterprise demand—such as zero-touch provisioning, multi-tenant isolation on IPU/DPU, or Kubernetes-native network function offload—will naturally get more traction and support. **Partner commitment.** A Blueprint with a committed contributing partner who will invest engineering time, maintain the documentation, and stand behind the solution as a services provider carries more weight than an idea without resourcing. *Bottom line: the best Blueprint is one that solves a real customer problem, uses actively maintained OPI components on validated hardware, involves multiple OPI member vendors, and has a committed partner behind it ready to support adoption.*
38-
39-
Prepared by WorldTech IT
40-
41-
Josh Brooks, Chief Solutions Architect | josh@worldtechit.com

0 commit comments

Comments
 (0)