Which standard setting organizations were most newsworthy in 2004, and which on-line media did the best job of covering the world of standards? We analyze the sources of the news...
...So how is a demand consistent with the concept of "open standards?" I don’t usually just paste in a response in its entirety that I entered elsewhere, but I’m leaving...
...step over the line? According to a ComputerWorld.com article that was posted on March 12: In other comments, some ISO members also noted the intense lobbying they were subjected to...
...landscape: a desirable, natural state that comprises many patches of different types of growth simultaneously existing at various stages of maturity. How that state is achieved once fire offers the...
...delegates to go off-line to discuss a resolution and come back with proposed compromise language. However, these efforts proved insufficient to do more than nibble away at the huge number...
...than looking for a protected cove among the rocks to camp, I shopped for the best view instead. The view delivered nicely, and I enjoyed watching the sunset fade into...
...best. When I was in ninth grade the least surprising but perhaps the most unjust event occurred, with the assassination of one of the greatest and most courageous men of...
...it is giving voice to the type of self-evident best practices that ought, by rights, to be already directing all standards development efforts everywhere. The problem is not that the IBM...
...while others would go further. For example, at the BRM, all National Bodies that voted, and not only those that had appended comments to their votes, attended. The recommendation would...
...you didn’t know.” – Admiral James G. Stavridis, retired Commander, U.S. European Command and NATO Supreme Allied Commander Europe, and current Dean of the Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy...