Cornelia's Weblog

my sporadically shared thoughts on, well, whatever is capturing my attention at the moment.

Archive for June, 2006

iECM Article in eDoc Magazine

My iECM co-chair, Eric Stevens, and I co-wrote an introductory article on iECM that can be found here.We are currently balloting the iECM technical scope – will post on the results of that in a couple of weeks.

Beyond a standard

Earlier I posted on the existence of a blog that covers industry standards. I came to that site because I was trying to get a grasp of what was going on with ODF, my interest being more in the dynamics around the standard than in the standard itself. It’s been getting a lot of buzz, something we can thank the State of Massachusetts for. If it wasn’t for the buzz, ODF would arguably sit alongside many other very useful, yet completely unused standards – a good piece of technology but little else. I’m not saying that without the State of Mass noise that ODF would be inconsequential, what I’m saying is that standards need a lot of support around them to make them successful.In March of this year, two different organizations were announced to provide support around the ODF standard. The ODF Alliance, hosted by the Software Information Industry Association (SIIA) is said to be about educating government entities on the benefits of ODF. A week after the announcement of the ODF Alliance, OASIS announced the formation of the ODF Adoption Committee which is chartered with “increas[ing] the demand for and availability of ODF conforming products.” Okay, so the support organizations appear to be competing, although I’d rather see it as ODF having more support.Conclusion: Any valuable standard can benefit greatly from the support of organizations that are there to promote, evangelize and provide guidance on the use of the standard.

Standards Blog

I’m sure there is more than one but following my initial review I am very impressed with this one. The containing site, Consortium Info claims to be “the most comprehensive source of information on the Internet regarding standards, standard setting, and open source software”. The site and blog are run by a lawyer specializing in technology, and while I still reserve judgement on the technical depth, the author, Andy Updegrove, covers the politics quite nicely (and we all know that standards are at least as much about politics as technology).A great deal of the recent blog entries are regarding ODF, something that is warranted given the battle before us – Microsoft vs. AUnitedGroup.

Really, I wasn’t snowboarding all of May

… though I kind of wish I was. Traveling everywhere else though, all for work. I’m back and am finding a lot of time to actually work on stuff and will be posting again.