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From uucp@tic.com Sat Jun 30 00:05:58 1990
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From: <jsh@usenix.org>
Newsgroups: comp.std.unix
Subject: Standards Update, USENIX Standards Watchdog Committee
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Date: 30 Jun 90 02:28:24 GMT
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From: <jsh@usenix.org>
An Update on UNIX*-Related Standards Activities
June, 1990
USENIX Standards Watchdog Committee
Jeffrey S. Haemer, Report Editor
USENIX Standards Watchdog Committee
Jeffrey S. Haemer <jsh@ico.isc.com> reports on spring-quarter
standards activities
What these reports are about
Reports are done quarterly, for the USENIX Association, by volunteers
from the individual standards committees. The volunteers are
familiarly known as snitches and the reports as snitch reports. The
band of snitches and I make up the working committee of the USENIX
Standards Watchdog Committee. Our job is to let you know about things
going on in the standards arena that might affect your professional
life -- either now or down the road a ways.
We don't yet have active snitches for all the committees and sometimes
have to beat the bushes for new snitches when old ones retire or can't
make a meeting, but the number of groups with active snitches
continues to grow (as, unfortunately, does the number of groups).
We know we currently need snitches in 1003.6 (Security), 1003.11
(Transaction Processing), 1003.13 (Real-time Profile), and nearly all
of the 1200-series POSIX groups, There are probably X3 groups the
USENIX members would like to know about that we don't even know to
look for watchdogs in. If you're active in any other standards-
related activity that you think you'd like to report on, please drop
me a line. Andrew Hume's fine report on X3B11.1 is an example of the
kind of submission I'd love to see.
If you have comments or suggestions, or are interested in snitching
for any group, please contact me (jsh@usenix.org) or John
(jsq@usenix.org). If some of the reports make you interested enough
or indignant enough to want to go to a POSIX meeting, or you just want
to talk to me in person, join me at the next set, July 16-20, at the
Sheraton Tara, in Danvers, Massachusetts, just outside of Boston.
The USENIX Standards Watchdog Committee also has both a financial
committee -- Ellie Young, Alan G. Nemeth, and Kirk McKusick (chair);
__________
* UNIX is a registered trademark of AT&T in the U.S. and other
countries.
June, 1990 Standards Update USENIX Standards Watchdog Committee
- 2 -
and a policy committee -- the financial committee plus John S.
Quarterman (chair).
An official statement from John:
The basic USENIX policy regarding standards is:
to attempt to prevent standards from prohibiting innovation.
To do that, we
+ Collect and publish contextual and technical information
such as the snitch reports that otherwise would be lost in
committee minutes or rationale appendices or would not be
written down at all.
+ Encourage appropriate people to get involved in the
standards process.
+ Hold forums such as Birds of a Feather (BOF) meetings at
conferences. We sponsored one workshop on standards. And
are cosponsoring another in conjunction with IEEE, UniForum,
and EUUG. (Co-chairs are Shane P. McCarron
<ahby@uiunix.org> and Fritz Schulz <fritz@osf.osf.org>.
Contact them for details.)
+ Write and present proposals to standards bodies in specific
areas.
+ Occasionally sponsor White Papers in particularly
problematical areas, such as IEEE 1003.7 (in 1989).
+ Very occasionally lobby organizations that oversee standards
bodies regarding new committee, documents, or balloting
procedures.
+ Starting in mid-1989, USENIX and EUUG (the European UNIX
systems Users Group) began sponsoring a joint representative
to the ISO/IEC JTC1 SC22 WG15 (ISO POSIX) standards
committee.
There are some things we do not do:
+ Form standards committees. It's the USENIX Standards
Watchdog Committee, not the POSIX Watchdog Committee, not
part of POSIX, and not limited to POSIX.
+ Promote standards.
+ Endorse standards.
June, 1990 Standards Update USENIX Standards Watchdog Committee
- 3 -
Occasionally we may ask snitches to present proposals or argue
positions on behalf of USENIX. They are not required to do so
and cannot do so unless asked by the USENIX Standards Watchdog
Policy Committee.
Snitches mostly report. We also encourage them to recommend
actions for USENIX to take.
John S. Quarterman, USENIX Standards Liaison
June, 1990 Standards Update USENIX Standards Watchdog Committee
Volume-Number: Volume 20, Number 65