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- From: unrza3@cd4680fs.rrze.uni-erlangen.de (Markus Kuhn)
- Newsgroups: comp.std.internat,comp.std.misc,comp.protocols.iso,comp.answers,news.answers
- Subject: Standards FAQ
- Supersedes: <std-faq_760740392@cd4680fs.rrze.uni-erlangen.de>
- Followup-To: comp.std.internat,comp.std.misc,comp.protocols.iso
- Date: Fri, 4 Mar 1994 23:49:56 +0100
- Organization: Regionales Rechenzentrum Erlangen, Germany
- Approved: news-answers-request@MIT.Edu
- Expires: 17 Apr 1994 22:49:54 GMT
- Message-ID: <std-faq_762821394@cd4680fs.rrze.uni-erlangen.de>
- Reply-To: mskuhn@cip.informatik.uni-erlangen.de
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- Summary: Answers to questions such as what are ISO standards, where can I
- get standards, what are ISO/ITU/ANSI/etc., what standards are
- there relevant to computing, ...? This is a periodic posting in
- comp.protocols.iso, comp.std.misc and comp.std.internat.
- Keywords: international standards, ISO, ANSI, ITU, CCITT
- Xref: bloom-beacon.mit.edu comp.std.internat:1399 comp.std.misc:388 comp.protocols.iso:2183 comp.answers:4040 news.answers:16023
-
- Archive-name: standards-faq
- Last-modified: $Date: 94/03/02 19:43:43 $
- Version: $Revision: 1.15 $
-
- Frequently Asked Questions about International Standards with Answers
- ---------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- This text is a monthly posting to the USENET groups comp.protocols.iso,
- comp.std.misc and comp.std.internat. Its purpose is to give answers to
- some of the questions appearing most often in these groups and to
- collect interesting information about standards that appeared in USENET
- discussions.
-
- If you have a suggestion how this text might be improved or have a text
- that you would like to be added, please send it to Markus Kuhn
- <mskuhn@cip.informatik.uni-erlangen.de>. Contributions, that I can
- simply copy into the text are especially welcome. If you can't send
- e-mail, you can also send documents or disks/tapes with material relevant
- to the FAQ or the ftp archive (ftp.uni-erlangen.de:pub/doc/ISO/)
- to Markus Kuhn, Schlehenweg 9, D-91080 Uttenreuth, Germany.
-
- This FAQ is crossposted to news.answers and won't expire there on
- well-managed news systems until the next version has been posted. As a
- consequence of being crossposted to news.answers, this text will also
- be automatically archived on many FAQ servers all over the world
- (e.g., look with ftp at server rtfm.mit.edu (login: anonymous) in
- /pub/usenet/news.answers/standards-faq). You'll also find there
- many other answers to frequently asked questions.
-
- This FAQ is perhaps one of the first that uses an 8-bit character set
- on USENET, because there are many non-ASCII characters necessary for a
- correct ISO member address list. Nearly the full USENET is 8-bit
- transparent, and the character set is announced in the message header
- as defined in RFC 1341. If you can't see the right characters then
- check your environment (fonts, stty settings, newsreader options,
- code pages, ...), because the character set ISO 8859-1 is available on
- many computers, but often simply not activated. A few test characters are
- Ω=e+^, ╡=greek mu, ⌐=copyright sign and ╜=fraction 1/2. If you see
- j, 5, ) and = instead, then the highest bit has been stripped off.
- The portable program iso2asc.c that you'll find with anonymous ftp on
- ftp.uni-erlangen.de in pub/doc/ISO/ converts ISO 8859-1 text files
- to 7-bit US-ASCII and to IBM PC character set if you can't display
- these characters directly.
-
- Don't be angry if anything in this text is incorrect. As with all
- information exchanged on USENET, you only get what you pay for and the
- current author isn't paid a single pfennig for this FAQ. Better mail
- me the correction!
-
- I hope you enjoy it ...
-
- Markus
-
-
- Contents
- --------
-
- What are ISO, ITU, CCITT, ANSI, ...?
- Why can't I ftp ISO standards?
- ! Where can I get standard documents?
- How can I get in contact with the committees?
- How can I get electronic versions of CCITT/ITU-T recommendations?
- ! Which Internet resources provide information about standards?
- What's the meaning of CD, DIS, IS?
- ISO standards relevant to computing
- ISO standards of general relevance
- Some ITU-T/CCITT recommendations
- ISO paper sizes
- What is ISO 9000?
- What's the address of my national standards body?
- References
-
- A '+' in the first column marks a topic that has been added since this
- FAQ was last posted the last time and a '!' marks a change. Trivial
- typographic changes are not marked.
-
-
-
- What are ISO, ITU, CCITT, ANSI, ...?
- ------------------------------------
-
- Many countries have national standards bodies where experts from
- industry and universities develop standards for all kinds of
- engineering problems. Among them are, for instance,
-
- ANSI American National Standards Institute USA
- DIN Deutsches Institut fuer Normung Germany
- BSI British Standards Institution United Kingdom
- AFNOR Association francaise de normalisation France
- UNI Ente Nazionale Italiano di Unificazione Italy
- NNI Nederlands Normalisatie-instituut Netherlands
- SAA Standards Australia Australia
- SANZ Standards Association of New Zealand New Zealand
- NSF Norges Standardiseringsforbund Norway
- DS Dansk Standard Denmark
-
- and about 80 others.
-
- The International Organization for Standardization, ISO, in Geneva is
- the head organization of all these national standardization bodies.
- Together with the International Electrotechnical Commission, IEC, ISO
- concentrates its efforts on harmonizing national standards all over the
- world. The results of these activities are published as ISO standards.
- Among them are, for instance, the metric system of units, international
- stationery sizes, all kinds of bolt nuts, rules for technical drawings,
- electrical connectors, security regulations, computer protocols, file
- formats, bicycle components, ID cards, programming languages,
- International Standard Book Numbers (ISBN), ... Over 10 000 ISO
- standards have been published so far and you surely get in contact with
- a lot of things each day that conform to ISO standards you never heard
- of. By the way, "ISO" is not an acronym for the organization in any
- language. It's a wordplay based on the English initials and the
- Greek-derived prefix "iso-" meaning "same".
-
- Within ISO, ISO/IEC Joint Technical Committee 1 (JTC1) deals with
- information technology.
-
- The International Telecommunication Union, ITU, is the United Nations
- specialized agency dealing with telecommunications. At present there
- are 164 member countries. One of its previous bodies was the
- International Telegraph and Telephone Consultative Committee, CCITT,
- which is now after an organizational reorganization of ITU called
- ITU-T (Telecommunication Standardization Sector). A Plenary Assembly
- of the CCITT/ITU-T, which takes place every few years, draws up a list
- of 'Questions' about possible improvements in international electronic
- communication. In Study Groups, experts from different countries
- develop 'Recommendations' which are published after they have been
- adopted. Especially relevant to computing are the ITU-T V series of
- recommendations on modems (e.g. V.32, V.42), the X series on data
- networks and OSI (e.g. X.25, X.400), the I and Q series that define
- ISDN, the Z series that defines specification and programming
- languages (SDL, CHILL), the T series on text communication (teletex,
- fax, videotext, ODA) and the H series on digital sound and video
- encoding. The previous CCIR (International Radio Consultative
- Committee and the IFBR (International Frequency Registration Board)
- are now called ITU-R (Radiocommunication Sector). The previous BDT
- (Telecommunications Development Bureau) is know called ITU-D.
-
- The European Committee for Standardization (CEN) adopts international
- and national standards with the effect that all member bodies have to
- withdraw contradicting material (e.g., ISO 9000 to 9004 were adopted
- as EN 29 000 to 29 004). Regional standardization bodies are
- mentioned in ISO/IEC Guides, and CEN seems to be the only one.
-
- Since 1961, the European Computer Manufacturers Association, ECMA, has
- been a forum for data processing experts where agreements have been
- prepared and submitted for standardization to ISO, ITU and other
- standards organizations.
-
-
- Why can't I ftp ISO standards?
- ------------------------------
-
- ISO standard documents are copyrighted by ISO, and their price is much
- higher than the costs for printing and shipping the papers. This is
- because the expenses of running ISO are partially covered by selling
- the standards (but ISO also gets member fees from the national
- organizations). Consequently, ISO standards are NOT available as
- public domain documents to Internet users.
-
- Many people feel that this is a great disadvantage and ISO is at the
- moment examining other methods of distributing the documents (e.g.
- CD-ROM, magnetic tapes and online access) but the odds are very low
- that ISO standards will become freely redistributable files like
- Internet RFCs in the near future (i.e. this decade).
-
- BTW: The costs of actually developing standards is borne by the
- thousands of organizations which pay for the time and travel expenses
- of the delegates to national and international level meetings.
-
- As a consequence of ISO's price and copyright policy for their
- documents, ISO standards are VERY unavailable to students and
- researchers with limited budget. Even huge companies have often only
- single copies of ISO documents which have to be time-shared by many
- engineers. This is very much contradicting to the very purpose of
- formal non-proprietary standards which is being easily available to
- everyone. That fact that ISO standards are not available online on the
- Internet is not a technical problem: the ISO Central Secretariat in
- Geneva is connected to the Internet and other public networks, they
- have the necessary hosts, software and people available and they use
- Internet services like ftp, gopher and WWW internally. But these
- databases are not available to the public. This is a political problem,
- not a technical one.
-
- Other international standardization organizations either offer their
- documents on the Internet freely (e.g. ITU and IETF) or send you the
- paper versions free of charge (e.g. ECMA and many other vendor
- organizations).
-
- If you are involved in the development of an international
- standard and are interested in the availability of your results
- for students, etc., then it is highly recommended not to give this
- standard directly to ISO, but to cooperate with other organizations
- with more useful copyright policies (e.g. ECMA, ITU, IETF, ...).
-
- By a liaison contribution from ISO/IEC JTC1/SC6 to the Internet
- Architecture Board (IAB), a very few OSI standards (e.g. ISO 8073, ISO
- 8473, ISO 9542, ISO 10589) ARE available as PostScript files with ftp
- from merit.edu in directory pub/iso as files clnp.ps, esis.ps, isis.ps
- and idrp.ps.
-
-
- Where can I get standard documents?
- -----------------------------------
-
- ISO standards are sold by the national standards body members (e.g.
- ANSI, DIN, ...), by special companies, and by the ISO General
- Secretary in Geneva. The standard way to order standards is to contact
- your national standards body (check the list in the chapter 'What's
- the address of my national standards body?'). If you want to get the
- standards directly from ISO, you may order them from
-
- ISO Sales
- Case Postale 56
- CH-1211 Geneve 20
- Switzerland
-
- E-mail: sales@isocs.iso.ch
-
- ISO accepts VISA and American Express. They require the card number,
- its expiry date, and an authorizing signature. Some people prefer to
- order their standards directly from ISO in Geneva, because some
- national member bodies (e.g. ANSI) reprint ISO standards locally, use
- cheaper paper and charge more for ISO standards than the headquarters.
-
- ISO publishes an 'ISO Bulletin' with information about current
- standardization activities and articles about various standards. It
- lists all the ISO standards published or withdrawn, the DISs
- circulated, the CDs registered, etc. It also has a calendar of all
- upcoming ISO meetings. You can get it from your national standards body
- or from the General Secretary in Geneva. You may get more information
- on this from
-
- International Organization
- for Standardization
- Promotion and Press Department
- Case Postale 56
- CH-1211 Geneve 20
- Switzerland
-
- ISO publishes an annual 'ISO Catalogue' which lists all ISO standards
- currently in force and other ISO publications (e.g. guides and
- standards handbooks) with a price code. It contains an entry like
-
- ISO 4074-2:1980 Rubber condoms--
- Part 2: Determination of length
- Ed. 1 2 p. Code A TC 157
-
- Preservatifs masculins en caoutchouc--
- Partie 2: Determination de la longueur
-
- for each ISO standard in both English and French and a few other lists.
- You have to ask your national standards body how much you have to pay
- them for a standard with price code A (e.g. 20 Swiss francs in
- Switzerland and 27.10 DM in Germany). The price depends on the number
- of pages of the document. Code A means 1 or 2 pages. :-(
-
- You can order all ITU (was: CCITT) recommendations from
-
- International Telecommunication Union
- General Secretariat - Sales Section
- Place des Nations
- CH-1211 Geneve 20
- Switzerland
-
- There you can also get a free ITU List of Publications. The 1988 series
- of recommendations has been published as the 'Blue Book' (consisting of
- Volumes each dealing with a specific topic and bound as "Fascicles" of
- a few hundred pages each) which fills about 16,000 pages or a whole
- shelf. The Blue Book volumes are about the phone net, ISDN, telex and
- teletex nets, fax protocols, OSI, international tariffs, etc. In the
- past, CCITT recommendations have been published in a four year cycle.
- These publications are identified by the color of their binding: 1960 red,
- 1964 blue, 1968 white, 1972 green, 1976 orange, 1980 yellow, 1984 red and
- 1988 blue. The 1992 White Book will be the last four year collection of
- all recommendations. After this, recommendations will be published
- separately.
-
- More information and some ASCII/PostScript/WinWord files with ITU
- recommendations are available from the ITU server (see below).
-
- The CCITT 1988 Blue Books are also available from:
-
- United Nations Bookshop
- General Assembly Building
- Room: G.A. 32 B
- New York, NY 10017
- USA
-
- phone +1 212 963-7680
- (800) 553-3210 (USA only, except NY)
- fax +1 212 963-4910
-
- Visa or Mastercard are accepted over $15.00.
- $2 per book for shipping/handling.
- UPS over 5 books is free of charge.
- E.g. the fascicle with X.400-X.420 costs $68.70.
-
- All ECMA standards are free and can be ordered at no cost from
-
- European Computer
- Manufacturers Association
- 114 Rue du Rhone
- CH-1204 Geneva
- Switzerland
-
- phone +41 22 7353634
- fax +41 22 7865231
- telex 413237
-
- The address of the European Telecommunication Standards Institute is:
-
- ETSI
- F-06921 Sophia Antipolis CEDEX
- France
-
- phone +33 92 94 42 00
- fax +33 93 65 47 16
-
- The address of the Conference of European Posts and Telecommunications
- Administrations, CEPT, is
-
- CEPT Liaison Office
- Seilerstrasse 22
- CH-3008 Bern
- Switzerland
-
- phone +41 31 62 20 81
- fax +41 31 62 20 78
-
- Their documents are called "Norme Europeene de Telecommunication", NET,
- and they allow you to test terminal equipment one for all of the EC.
- CEPT is covered by EEC Directive 86/361.
-
- The address of the ANSI sales department is:
-
- ANSI
- Attention: Customer Service
- 11 West 42nd St.
- New York, NY 10036
- USA
-
- phone +1 212 642-4900
-
- DIN, ISO and other standards are sold in Germany by
-
- Beuth Verlag GmbH
- D-10772 Berlin
- Germany
-
- phone +49 30 2601-0
- fax +49 30 2601-1231
- telex 183622 bvb d
- teletex 302107 bvb awg
-
- The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers (IEEE) also
- publishes standards. They can be ordered by email from the IEEE
- Computer Society Press:
-
- Send an email message to <cs.books@compmail.com> and include your
- name, IEEE membership number, shipping address, phone number,
- publication title, catalog number and price.
- Payment accepted by credit card or purchase order. Credit card
- orders must include: card number, expiration date and your name
- as it appears on the card. Purchase orders must include: purchase
- order number, name of purchasing organization, your name, phone
- number and shipping address.
-
- For several years the US company OMNICOM published a newsletter about
- OSI development and distributed copies of ISO standards. Document
- distribution for OMNICOM (which is out of business) has been taken over
- by Phillips Business Information. The phone number (800) OMNICOM still
- works, but is answered by Phillips.
-
- Phillips Business Information
- 1201 Seven Locks Road
- Potomac, MD 20854.
-
- phone +1 301 424-3338
- (800) 777 5006
- fax +1 301 309-3847
-
- It is highly recommended to compare prices before ordering standards!
-
-
- How can I get in contact with the committees?
- ---------------------------------------------
-
- The standard way is to contact the members of your national standards
- body. Some of these people will also serve as your country's
- representatives to the international organizations.
-
- Only a very few experts active within ISO and CCITT are regularly reading
- USENET but most are reachable with Internet mail.
-
- The editor of the new ASN.1 encoding rules standard (ISO 8825) is
-
- Bancroft Scott <baos@oss.oss.com>
-
- The editor of the X.gc group working on a news extension for the
- X.400 electronic mail protocols similar to USENET is
-
- Jacob Palme, Stockholm University <jpalme@dsv.su.se>
-
- ECMA has email access and the secretary-general can be reached with
-
- <jan.van-den-beld@ecma.ch>.
-
- ISO Central Secretariat also has email access. The usual address is
-
- Internet: <surname>@isocs.iso.ch
- X.400: C=CH; ADMD=ARCOM; PRMD=ISO; O=ISOCS; S=<surname>
-
- E.g., some known addresses are
-
- Michael Smith <smith@isocs.iso.ch>
- Jacques Chabot <chabot@isocs.iso.ch>
- Keith Brannon <brannon@isocs.iso.ch> (responsible for IT)
- Vasilii Zakharov <zakharov@isocs.iso.ch> (IT director)
-
- ISO's hot line phone number is +41 22 749-0222.
-
- IEC also is up on email and is accessable from Internet through
- a bridge (that's sometimes down). One address is e.g.:
-
- Jack Sheldon <jack.sheldon@iecmhs.iec.inet.ch>
-
-
- How can I get electronic versions of CCITT/ITU-T recommendations
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
- ITU now operates a public ITU Document Store (ITUDOC). It can be reached
- as a mail server and interactively with a Gopher interface. An FTP
- Server is planned.
-
- For more detailed assistance than given below, please contact:
-
- International Telecommunication Union
- Information Services Department
- Place des Nations
- 1211 Geneva 20
- Switzerland
-
- TEL: +41 22 730 5554
- FAX: +41 22 730 5337
- RFC822: helpdesk@itu.ch
- X.400: S=helpdesk;A=arcom;P=itu;C=ch
-
-
- INTERACTIVE ACCESS TO ITUDOC
-
- Interactive access to ITUDOC is available as one of ITU's 'Open
- Services' available in TIES (Telecom Information Exchange Services).
- Connectivity to TIES is possible via:
-
- 1. GOPHER CLIENT
-
- Pointer to the ITU Gopher Server is
-
- Name=International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
- Host=info.itu.ch
- Port=70
-
- 2. TELNET
-
- Telnet: ties.itu.ch or info.itu.ch (login name 'gopher')
-
- 3. X.25
-
- Call the X.25 DTE address, on TELEPAC, the Swiss PSPDN
-
- #228468111112
-
- where # is local prefix for international routing, login name
- 'gopher'
-
- 4. DIAL-UP
-
- +41 22 733 7575 (Swiss telephone number, login name 'gopher')
-
- Supported modem protocols include ITU-T (CCITT) V.21, V.22,
- V.22bis, V.32, V.42, V.42bis Recommendations, Bell212A and MNP 2,
- 3, 4, 5. Basic settings should be no parity, 8 data bits
- (necessary for on-line reading of multilingual material), speed
- 300 to 9,600 bps.
-
- For downloading documents/files, several file transfer methods are
- supported (e.g., Kermit, XModem, Text, FTP, email).
-
-
- EMAIL ACCESS TO ITUDOC
-
- For help on the ITUDOC electronic mail interface, send a message with
- the line HELP in it to:
-
- itudoc@itu.ch
-
- The mail server will return to you a help document explaining all
- valid commands. For example, to retrieve any ITUDOC document, you
- send the command:
-
- GET <UPI>
-
- where <UPI> is the UPI (Unique Permanent Identifier) for the
- document. For example, to retrieve the index of the ITU-T (ITU
- Telecommunication Standardization Sector) Group, send the command:
-
- GET ITU-1100
-
- See below for the UPIs of other index files. You can place multiple
- commands in a single message (maximum 50).
-
-
- ITUDOC INDEX FILES
-
- Here are UPIs for key ITUDOC index files. Index files describe the
- structure of groups and list UPIs for all documents available in the
- group. Index files are updated every two weeks.
-
- Title: Road Map and Index for ITUDOC (About ITUDOC) Group
- UPI: ITU-1800
-
- Title: Road Map and Index for GS (ITU General Secretariat) Group
- UPI: ITU-1700
-
- Title: Road Map and Index for ITU-D (ITU Development Sector) Group
- UPI: ITU-1300
-
- Title: Road Map and Index for ITU-R (ITU Radiocommunication Sector)
- Group
- UPI: ITU-1200
-
- Title: Road Map and Index for ITU-T (ITU Telecommunication
- Standardization Sector) Group
- UPI: ITU-1100
-
- NB: the above group is ex-CCITT and contains UPIs for telecom
- standardization-related documents (e.g., List of Recommendations,
- ITU-T Recommendations)
-
- Title: Road Map and Index for SIGS (Special Interest Groups) Group
- UPI: ITU-1500
-
- Title: Road Map and Index for TIES (Telecom Information Exchange
- Services) Group
- UPI: ITU-1400
-
- Title: Road Map and Index for the complete ITU Document Store
- UPI: ITU-1600
-
- Title: Road Map and Index for UN/EDICORE (United Nations UN/EDIFACT
- Standards Database (EDICORE)) Group
- UPI: ITU-1900
-
-
- Which Internet resources provide information about standards?
- -------------------------------------------------------------
-
- The author of this FAQ maintains an archive where information about
- ISO standards is collected at anonymous ftp server ftp.uni-erlangen.de
- in pub/doc/ISO/. Contact <mskuhn@cip.informatik.uni-erlangen.de>
- if you would like to contribute anything. (A few German texts are
- available in pub/doc/ISO/deutsch.)
-
- The RFCs are ftpable from nic.ddn.mil, nisc.sri.com, nnsc.nsf.net and
- from many other sites all over the world.
-
- For information about POSIX, the ISO and IEEE standard for UNIX
- compatible operating systems, look at the file ~ftp/usenet/comp.std.unix
- on ftp.uu.net.
-
- Other ftp locations with information about OSI and other ISO standards
- are:
-
- address directory content
- -------------------------------------------------------------------------
- osi.ncsl.nist.gov * GOSIP stuff
- ftp.uu.net networking/osi ISODE
- networking/x25 X.25 software
- nic.ddn.mil protocols DoD and GOSIP related stuff
- rfc RFC Repository
- cs.ucl.ac.uk src ISODE, PP, OSIMIS, ...
- osi-ds Internet X.500 documents
- ietf-osi-oda Internet ODA documents
- aun.uninett.no ietf/mhs-ds X.500 based routing drafts
- ftp.ifi.uio.no pub/SGML SGML/HyTime related things
- dkuug.dk i18n internationalisation standards
- ftp.ripe.net ripe/docs/iso3166-codes ISO Country Codes
- isode.com * ISODE Consortium documents
- merit.edu pub/iso few ISO standards (CLNP etc.)
- unicode.org pub Unicode/ISO 10646 material
- sunsite.unc.edu pub/Z39.50 ISO SR/Z39.50 drafts
- ftp.cme.nist.gov pub/step ISO 10303/STEP archive
- ftp.dstc.edu.au pub/arch/RM-ODP Open Distributed Processing
-
- The USENET group comp.protocols.iso.x400 has been created for
- discussions about the X.400 OSI e-mail protocol suite. Harald Tveit
- Alvestrand <harald.t.alvestrand@delab.sintef.no> is posting an X.400
- FAQ and product list monthly there and Jacob Palme <jpalme@dsv.su.se>
- posts his reports from the ITU/ISO X.400 study group meetings in the
- same group. The reports from Jacob Palme about X.400, the official
- X.400 implementor's guide and various research reports are available
- with gopher from dsv.su.se.
-
- Information about ITU is available with gopher from info.itu.ch.
-
- There is a USENET group comp.text.sgml for discussions about SGML,
- DSSSL, HyTime, etc. Articles posted there are archived on ftp.ifi.uio.no.
-
- CMIP Run is a newsletter dedicated to popularizing and explaining the
- various network and systems management technologies, especially OSI CMIP.
- CMIP Run is available via anonymous ftp in postscript from 192.35.236.4
- in pub/cmip_run.
-
- A few ISO standards are available freely as Postscript files with ftp
- from merit.edu in pub/iso as clnp.ps, esis.ps, isis.ps and idrp.ps. These
- are OSI connectionless network layer standards.
-
- Information about the world time standard UTC (e.g. when will the
- next leap second be inserted in time, etc.) is available from the
- 'International Earth Rotation Service' (IERS) with anonymous
- ftp from mesiom.obspm.circe.fr. There is no single official
- document that defines the time zones, but a good collection of
- information about time zones from Arthur David Olson is available
- with ftp from elsie.nci.nih.gov in pub/tz*. It's updated periodically.
-
- If you can't get files with ftp, you might want to use one of the
- ftpmail servers (e.g. ftpmail@decwrl.dec.com or ftpmail@src.doc.ic.ac.uk).
- For detailed instructions send them a message with "help" in the body.
-
-
- What's the meaning of CD, DIS, IS?
- ----------------------------------
-
- [Posted by Brad Smith <smithb@durer.cme.nist.gov>:]
-
- Replies to an earlier posting of mine indicated a lack of familiarity
- with current ISO procedures for developing and gaining consensus on
- international standards. Here are some notes to update you.
-
- The 1989 revision of the ISO/IEC Directives specify the accepted
- procedure for developing and approving International Standards. This
- is a complicated process with many activities and critical milestones
- so if you do any standards work, you will probably want to get a copy
- of the document for reference.
-
- THE ISO PROCESS:
-
- The Directives give a set of procedures for managing the work of a
- committee which define five stages of document approval:
-
- The Proposal Stage
- Voting members ballot on the creation of a new
- standards project.
-
- The Preparatory Stage
- Project Leader manages the development of a Working
- Draft.
-
- The Committee Stage
- Consensus is achieved on a Committee Draft.
-
- The Approval Stage
- National bodies vote on a Draft International
- Standard.
-
- The Publication Stage
- ISO publishes the International Standard.
-
- PROPOSAL STAGE:
-
- The Proposal stage begins with a suggestion for a new area of
- standardization activity (see [ISO1] - clause 2.2, page 17). The
- suggestion is documented on an ISO New Work Item Proposal form and is
- sent out by the committee's Secretariat to all participating and
- observing members of the committee, to all liaison organizations, and
- to other national bodies of ISO. A three-month voting period is
- prescribed. All voting members have an obligation to reply.
-
- Approval requires a simple majority vote and a commitment by at least
- five national bodies to actively participate. Projects can be placed
- within an existing Working Group (WG), or a new WG can be created to
- act as a focus for technical development work.
-
- The Proposal stage ends when a New Work Item is approved, is registered
- with the ISO, and is included in the list of projects within the
- program of work of the SC-4 Committee.
-
- PREPARATORY STAGE:
-
- The Preparatory stage of ISO standards development covers the creation
- of a working draft of the ultimate standard (see [ISO1] - clause 2.3,
- page 17). The work is performed by experts from participating
- countries organized into working groups and advisory groups under the
- guidance of a convener, and further subdivided into project areas each
- under the direction of a Project Leader (see [ISO1] - clause 2.1.6,
- page 16).
-
- Different committees may decide on different procedures to govern the
- development of working drafts of their standards. In our committee,
- Working Group conveners have been encouraged to subdivide the technical
- work into logical tasks each under the direction of a Project Leader.
- Project Leaders report to the Convener of their parent Working Group.
- The Working Group convener usually serves as a Project Leader (see
- [ISO1] - clause 2.3.3, page 17) but is additionally responsible for
- coordinating any other Project Leaders in the WG as well.
-
- As technical work is completed by a WG, it is documented in a working
- draft of an ISO standard and begins the process of consensus-building
- and approval. Generally, each document has an editor who has custody
- of the electronic form of the document, but the project leader has the
- overall responsibility for coordinating the efforts necessary to gain
- approval of the draft as an international standard.
-
- The ISO Directives do not give details of the process for developing a
- working draft within the hierarchy of projects, WGs, and advisory
- groups. That is left for each SC to establish for itself. Our
- committee has a detailed set of procedures which are available if
- anyone wants to see them.
-
- The Preparatory stage for any one Part ends when a working draft of
- that Part has been approved by the Project Management Advisory Group.
- It is at that time given to the Secretariat of SC-4 who formally
- registers the Part as a Committee Draft with ISO (see [ISO1] - clause
- 2.3.8, page 18).
-
- COMMITTEE STAGE:
-
- The Committee stage begins with the circulation of the document in the
- form of a Committee Draft (CD) for formal balloting (see [ISO1], clause
- 2.4.1, page 18 and SC4 Res# 73). The ballot is sent out by the
- committee Secretariat to all participating and observing countries of
- SC-4 and also to Class A Liaison organizations. All recipients are
- asked for comments on the CD. Voting members are asked to vote on the
- acceptance of the CD for registration as a Draft International
- Standard. All voting members have an obligation to reply. A three
- month voting period is prescribed. Ballot comments are collected and
- summarized by the Secretariat.
-
- A team consisting of the Secretariat, the committee Chairman, the
- affected Conveners, and the affected Project Leaders review the ballot
- comments to determine the degree of consensus obtained. Based on the
- evaluation, a decision is made whether to
-
- a) discuss the CD and comments at the next meeting,
- b) register the CD as a Draft International Standard, or
- c) ask that a revised CD be prepared for circulation
-
- If at least three voting members of SC-4 disagree with proposal b) or
- c) of the Secretariat, the CD will be put on the agenda for discussion
- at the next committee meeting.
-
- Failure to attain consensus approval of a Part will trigger
- determination c) above and thus cause the document to be returned to
- the Working Group level for the preparation of a revised Committee
- Draft.
-
- It should be noted that both an English and a French text must be
- available for each Part during the Approval stage which comes next.
- This translation should be instigated at an early date to allow time
- for a quality effort.
-
- The Committee stage ends for a CD when the Part is accepted by
- committee ballot. The document is then given to the Secretariat who
- formally submits the English and French versions to ISO for
- registration of the Part as a Draft International Standard (see [ISO1]
- - clause 2.4.7, page 19).
-
- APPROVAL STAGE:
-
- The Approval Stage begins with circulation of the English and French
- versions of the Part in the form of a Draft International Standard
- (DIS) for formal balloting (see [ISO1] - clause 2.5.1, page 19). The
- ballot is sent out by ISO Central Secretariat to all national bodies of
- ISO (our committee members plus others). Recipients are asked to vote
- on the approval of the DIS as an International Standard. All national
- bodies have an obligation to reply. A six-month voting period is
- prescribed. Ballot comments are collected by ISO and are returned to
- our committee.
-
- The DIS is approved if a two-thirds majority of votes cast by voting
- members of our committee are in favor and if not more than 25% of the
- total number of votes cast are negative. Abstentions are excluded when
- counting votes (see [ISO1] - clause 2.5.3, page 20). If so approved,
- the committee Chairman, in cooperation with the Secretariat, and in
- consultation with the ISO Chief Executive Officer makes a decision
- whether the document should be published without change or whether an
- amendment should be drafted to reflect persuasive technical comments
- received (see [ISO1] - clause 2.5.4, page 20). If an amendment is
- drafted, it requires a two-month vote as above.
-
- If the DIS is not approved, the Committee Chairman, in cooperation with
- the Secretariat (and, if necessary the Project Leader and the affected
- WG Conveners), and in consultation with the ISO Chief Executive
- Officer, makes a decision whether to prepare a new DIS for a two-month
- vote or to refer the document back to committee for further work (see
- [ISO1] - clause 2.5.6, page 20).
-
- The Approval stage ends with the decision of the committee Chairman to
- publish. The Secretariat then prepares the final manuscript and sends
- it to ISO.
-
- PUBLICATION STAGE:
-
- The ISO Chief Executive Officer does final preparation of the Foreword
- and sends the proof back to the SC-4 Secretariat for review. Further
- editorial or technical amendments are unacceptable at this stage.
-
- The Publication stage ends with the release of the document as an
- International Standard.
-
- [FAQ author's note: The reference [ISO1] hasn't been resolved in Brad
- Smith's original posting, but, according to the ISO Catalogue, the
- complete ISO ceremony of creating a standard is defined in:
-
- IEC/ISO Directives -- Part 1,
- Procedures for the technical work,
- 1989, 140p., ISBN 92-67-10150-1.
-
- IEC/ISO Directives -- Part 2,
- Methodology for the development of International Standards,
- 1989, 62p., ISBN 92-67-10149-8.
-
- IEC/ISO Directives -- Part 3,
- Drafting and presentation of International Standards,
- 1989, 2nd ed., 82 p., bilingual, ISBN 92-67-01055-7.
-
- Harald Alvestrand wrote me, that there is also something called a "CD
- ballot" that is needed to get a document from "expert contribution"
- status to "CD" status, and that there are exceptions to the "French
- required" rules. He has one DIS that says on the cover: "In accordance
- with the provisions of Council Resolution 21/1986 this DIS is submitted
- in the English language only"]
-
- Eberhard Wegner noted, that "JTC 1 have their own Directives, replacing
- ISO/IEC Directives. It is even worse: ISO and IEC have separately adopted the
- Vienna Agreement with CEN (on common simultaneous voting), but JTC 1 has
- not; so it is not valid for them. Instead of overcoming the separation
- between ISO and IEC, the creation of JTC 1 introduced a third body."
-
- Another nice explanation :-) has been posted by Chad Fogg <cfogg@ole.cdac.com>:
-
- Here is the evolutionary chart of ISO standards:
-
- 1. Barroom witticism ("NI" or "Napkin Item")
- 2. New proposal ("NP" or "Need Permission")
- 3. Working Draft ("WD" or "We were Drunk")
- 4. Committee Draft ("CD" or "Calendar Deadlock")
- 5. Draft International Standard ("DIS" or "Doesn't Include Substance")
- 6. International Standard ("IS" or "Induced patent Statements")
-
-
- ISO standards relevant to computing
- -----------------------------------
-
- A summary of ISO and CCITT standards relevant to OSI (Open System
- Interconnection) protocols is part of the osi-protocols FAQ which is
- posted to comp.protocols.iso.
-
- ISO 646 Good ol' 7-bit ASCII with national variants
-
- IEC 824 Terminology related to microprocessors
-
- ISO 2022 ESC sequences for switching between various character sets
-
- ISO 2382 Information technology -- Vocabulary
-
- ISO 3166 Codes for the representation of names of countries.
- This standard defines a 2-letter, a 3-letter and a numeric
- code for each country on this planet. E.g. US/USA/840=
- United States, DE/DEU/276=Germany, GB/GBR/826=United
- Kingdom, FR/FRA/250=France, ...)
- The 2-letter codes are well known in the Internet as top-level
- domain names. The 3-letter versions are often used at
- international sports events.
-
- ISO 4217 Codes for the representation of currencies and funds
-
- ISO 5218 Representation of human sexes
- Sex is represented by a one-character language independent
- numerical code: 0=not known, 1=male, 2=female, 9=not
- specified. The standard also specifies, that "no significance
- is to be placed on the fact that 'Male' is coded '1' and
- 'Female' is coded '2'. This standard was developed based
- upon predominant practice of the countries involved and does
- not convey any meaning of importance, ranking or any other
- basis that could imply discrimination." :-)
-
- ISO 6429 ASCII Control Codes. Subsets of these are also known as
- VT100/VT320/ANSI escape sequences.
-
- ISO 6709 Representation of latitude, longitude and altitude of
- geographic positions
-
- ISO 7816 Chip cards. Specifies the dimensions, connector locations,
- electrical specifications, the lower layer protocol format
- (bidirectional 9600 bits/s async. serial) and the format
- of some common data packets of smart cards.
-
- ISO 8601 Representation of dates and times.
- This standard defines a lot of details of the calendar.
- E.g. the ISO definition of the week numbers is that the
- first day (day number 1) of a week is Monday and that the
- first week in a year (week number 1) is the week that includes
- the first Thursday in January, i.e. the first week that has at
- least four days in January. Other definitions are, e.g., that
- hours of a day are counted from 0 to 24 and that the
- international notation of dates is the Bigendian format
- year-month-day, e.g. 1993-04-17 and that for time is e.g.
- 20:36:04 (hh-mm-ss). There are also string formats for
- computer applications specified that have to represent
- date and time in files and protocol packets. (See
- ftp.uni-erlangen.de:pub/doc/ISO/ISO8601.ps.Z for a
- very detailed summary.)
-
- ISO 8632 Computer Graphics Metafile (CGM). This standard defines
- a file format for 2D vector graphics. Part 1 defines the
- graphic elements (lines, filled polygons, text, colors, ...)
- that may appear in a CGM and the other parts define 3 different
- encodings for these graphic elements:
-
- Character encoding: compact ASCII encoding, useful if
- CGM files have to be transported
- over not binary-transparent channels
- (e.g. e-mail, character set converter)
- Binary encoding: this is the most often implemented
- CGM encoding, because it is both
- efficient and easy to implement.
- Clear text encoding: a human readable textual encoding.
-
- This standard format might be exactly what you need if you
- want to store pictures that can be drawn by the usual graphic
- library functions (move, line, set_color, set_linestyle, ...)
- in an resolution-independend way. The format is simple and
- easy to understand. The new 1992 revision of the CGM standard
- contains many additional graphic elements (splines, rendering
- options for ends and joins of thick lines, several color
- models, high quality fonts, grouping of graphical elements, ...)
- that make this format capable of storing images with the quality
- you are used to get from Postscript, Corel Draw, Framemaker,
- etc. The main difference between CGM and Postscript is that
- Postscript is a full programming language while CGM is just
- a simple list of graphical elements which makes CGM suitable
- for reediting.
-
- ISO 8652 The Ada programming language
-
- ISO 8859 Several 8-bit ASCII extensions. Especially ISO 8859-1, the
- "Latin alphabet No. 1" has become widely implemented and may
- already be seen as the de-facto standard ASCII replacement.
-
- ISO 8859-1 west European languages (Latin-1)
- ISO 8859-2 east European languages (Latin-2)
- ISO 8859-3 other Latin languages (Latin-3)
- ISO 8859-4 north European languages (Latin-4)
- ISO 8859-5 Latin/Cyrillic
- ISO 8859-6 Latin/Arabic
- ISO 8859-7 Latin/Greek
- ISO 8859-8 Latin/Hebrew
- ISO 8859-9 Latin-1 modification for Turkey (Latin-5)
- ISO 8859-10 Baltic countries (under preparation)
-
- ISO 8879 Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML), a format
- for storing documents together with their logical structure
- and perhaps layout information in a standardized way.
- (see also USENET group comp.text.sgml)
-
- ISO 9127 User documentation and cover information for consumer
- software packages
-
- ISO 9592 Programmer's Hierarchical Interactive Graphics Interface
- (PHIGS)
-
- ISO 9593 PHIGS Language Bindings (Fortran, Pascal, Ada, C)
-
- ISO 9541 Font and Character Information Interchange
-
- ISO 9636 Graphical device interfaces
-
- ISO 9660 CD-ROM volume and file structure
-
- ISO 9899 The C programming language
-
- ISO 9945 UNIX style system calls and shell commands (POSIX)
-
- ISO 10646 A 32-bit character set called UCS containing (nearly) all
- characters used on this planet that will hopefully solve
- most of the character set troubles with computers one day.
- Today only the 16-bit subset UCS-2 has been defined, also
- known as 'Unicode' that is expected to become pretty
- popular soon and will be supported by Windows NT, Plan 9
- and other new operating systems.
-
- ISO 10744 HyTime -- A hypertext/multimedia extension to SGML
-
-
- ISO standards of general relevance
- ----------------------------------
-
- (Of course, there are a more then 10 000 of them, so this list will
- always contain only a few of the more well-known international
- standards.)
-
- ISO 3 Preferred numbers
- Especially in engineering applications, where a designer often
- has to choose an arbitrary dimension (e.g. the length of a
- part) within a range, it might be useful to have some
- 'preferred numbers' defined that should be preferred in these
- situations. These are 1, 1.6, 2.5, 4, 6.3 which might be
- multiplied or divided by 10 as often as necessary and should be
- used together with SI (metric) units. The above simplest
- set of preferred numbers devides the range from 1 to 10 with 5
- numbers. There are also supersets with more numbers defined, e.g.
- 1, 1.25, 1.6, 2, 2.5, 3.15, 4, 5, 6.3, 8. This standard is perhaps
- less relevant in computer science, where programmers traditionally
- use the powers of two (1, 2, 4, 8, 16, ...) multiplied by 1, 3 or
- 5 as 'preferred numbers'. [Warning: using only powers of 2
- in software, e.g. as array sizes, can also have disadvantages
- such as reduced cache efficiency.]
-
- ISO 9 Transliteration of Slavic Cyrillic characters into
- Latin characters
-
- ISO 31 The international system of physical quantities,
- units and symbols (the "metric system")
-
- ISO 216 Paper sizes -- A and B series
-
- ISO 233 Transliteration of Arabic characters into Latin
- characters
-
- ISO 259 Transliteration of Hebrew characters into Latin
- characters
-
- ISO 269 Correspondence envelope sizes
-
- ISO 639 Code for the representation of names of languages
- (e.g., en=English, de=German, and several hundred others)
-
- ISO 838 Paper holes for general filing purposes
-
- ISO 1000 SI units and recommendations for the use of their
- multiples and of certain other units.
-
- ISO 2108 International standard book number (ISBN)
-
- ISO 3602 Romanization of Japanese (kana script)
-
- ISO 5966 Presentation of scientific and technical reports
-
- ISO 7000 Graphical symbols for use on equipment
-
- ISO 7001 Public information symbols
-
- ISO 7098 Romanization of Chinese
-
- ISO 7144 Presentation of theses and similar documents
-
- ISO 9000 Quality management and quality assurance (also ISO 9001 -
- ISO 9004).
-
- ISO 11172 Digital video/audio compression and encoding (MPEG)
-
- [... to be continued ...]
-
-
- Some ITU-T/CCITT recommendations
- --------------------------------
-
- E.123 A notation for international telephone numbers (a '+'
- followed by the country code, followed by a space, ...)
-
- E.163 The international telephone numbering plan defining the
- structure of the phone number system and defining the
- country codes (e.g. 1=USA/Canada/etc., 49=Germany, ...).
-
- H.261 Video telephony standard
-
- X.25 An interface to a public or private packet data network
-
- X.3/X.28/ Specification of a device (PAD) that allows to connect
- X.29 asynchronous ASCII terminals to X.25 networks. X.3 defines
- the parameters that allow to control the PAD operation,
- X.28 specifies the command language offered to the terminal
- user and X.29 is the protocol used by the PAD over X.25.
-
- V.21 Duplex 300 bits/s modem modulation.
-
- V.22 Duplex 1200 bits/s modem modulation.
-
- V.22bis Duplex 2400 bits/s modem modulation.
-
- V.32 Duplex modem modulation up to 9600 bits/s.
-
- V.32bis Duplex modem modulation up to 14400 bits/s.
-
- V.34 Duplex modem modulation up to 28800 bits/s.
- This is currently expected to be the final analog
- telephone transmission standard, because theoretical
- limits of the phone bandwidth have been reached.
- (still in draft state, preliminary name was: V.fast,
- official final version expected in September 1994)
-
- V.42 HDLC based error correction protocol for modems.
-
- V.42bis Lempel-Ziv based data compression algorithm for HDLC
- protocols.
-
- and many more (e.g. the I.xxx recommandations about ISDN) ...
-
- See chapter 'How can I get electronic versions of CCITT/ITU-T
- recommendations?' for information about where to get the full list
- and some of these texts.
-
-
- ISO paper sizes
- ---------------
-
- The paper formats defined by ISO in the A, B and C series are used
- today in nearly all countries apart from North America.
-
- The formats have been determined according to the following rules:
-
- - A0 has an area of one square meter.
- - The aspect ratio of all members of the A, B and C-series is
- sqrt(2) = 1.41421...
- - You get the next higher format by cutting the paper in two
- equal pieces parallel to the shorter side. This results again in
- a 1 : sqrt(2) format (that's the big advantage of this format).
- - The size of a B-series paper is the geometric mean between the size of
- the corresponding A-series paper and the next bigger A-series paper.
- E.g. B1 is between A1 and A0.
- - The size of a C-series paper is the geometric mean between the size of
- the A-series and B-series paper with the same number.
-
- This means that the following formulas give the dimensions in meters:
-
- Width Height
- A-series 2 ^ (- 1/4 - n/2) 2 ^ (1/4 - n/2)
- B-series 2 ^ ( - n/2) 2 ^ (1/2 - n/2)
- C-series 2 ^ (- 1/8 - n/2) 2 ^ (3/8 - n/2)
-
- Larger sizes have smaller numbers. Sizes larger than those with n = 0
- are written as 2 A0 and 4 A0 rather than A(-1) and A(-2).
-
- The following table lists the official definitions of the paper sizes
- which are the values from the above formulas rounded more-or-less to
- an integral number of millimeters:
-
- 4 A0 1682 x 2378
- 2 A0 1189 x 1682
- A0 841 x 1189 B0 1000 x 1414 C0 917 x 1297
- A1 594 x 841 B1 707 x 1000 C1 648 x 917
- A2 420 x 594 B2 500 x 707 C2 458 x 648
- A3 297 x 420 B3 353 x 500 C3 324 x 458
- A4 210 x 297 B4 250 x 353 C4 229 x 324
- A5 148 x 210 B5 176 x 250 C5 162 x 229
- A6 105 x 148 B6 125 x 176 C6 114 x 162
- A7 74 x 105 B7 88 x 125 C7 81 x 114
- A8 52 x 74 B8 62 x 88 C8 57 x 81
- A9 37 x 52 B9 44 x 62 C9 40 x 57
- A10 26 x 37 B10 31 x 44 C10 28 x 40
-
- The most popular sizes are perhaps:
-
- A0 technical drawings
- A4 letters, magazines, documents
- A5 books
- C4,C5,C6 envelopes
- B4,A3 supported by many copy machines, newspapers
-
- There are also strip formats possible, e.g.
-
- 1/3 A4 99 x 210
- 2/3 A4 198 x 210
- 1/4 A4 74 x 210
- 1/8 A4 37 x 210
- 1/4 A3 105 x 297
- 1/3 A5 70 x 148
- etc.
-
- All these formats are paper end formats, i.e. these are the dimensions
- of the paper delivered to the user/reader. Other standards define slightly
- bigger paper sizes for applications where the paper will be cut to the
- end format later (e.g. after binding).
-
- The ISO DL envelope format has the dimensions 220 x 110 millimeters.
-
- (The values have been copied from DIN 476 (Dec 1976) which is the
- German version of the ISO 216 standard).
-
-
- What is ISO 9000?
- -----------------
-
- Q. I've seen recently announcements of several big companies in
- newspapers, where they tell their customers that they now conform to
- ISO 9000. What is ISO 9000?
-
- A. A standard for the development process of a product.
-
- Q. Why has ISO 9000 been written and what does it mean if a company
- claims to conform to ISO 9000 ?
-
- A. I think, it means that the product which carries the ISO 9000
- certified mark has undergone a well-defined, well-engineered,
- well-monitored design/development/testing/production process. (This in
- turn is expected to imply that the product is not a result of some
- hap-hazard development and thus is of a superior quality.)
-
- The agency which registers a product as ISO registered expects that the
- business produce a "Quality Manual". They verify the manual against the
- ISO 9000 standards. Then they verify that the design/development/test
- etc. processes closely agree with what is mentioned in the Quality
- Manual, recommend corrective actions, if any, and after a few periodic
- (at least 6 monthly) assesments certify the product as an ISO 9000
- registered product.
-
- Q. A few practical examples?
-
- Basically, it results in "Document everything you do" and "Do what you
- have documented". It is expected that there will be a documented
- procedure for everything that is done in the design/development/testing
- of a product. The ISO inspectors are quite meticulous about these
- things. (I heard some of the ISO coordinators relating there
- experiences.)
-
- Key changes needed:
-
- o Training of the full time personnel to understand ISO 9000
- standards, ISO Audit, etc.
- o Alerting all the employees of upcoming ISO audits and having
- periodic educational talks on how to work in a ISO framework.
- o Slowly changing the work habits of the employees so that: They
- do what is documented and the document says exactly what they
- are doing.
-
- Key considerations:
-
- o Financial commitment involved in getting ISO registed. (Close to
- $20k per product over a 2 year period in external costs + internal
- costs in training people work hours lost during the audits (3-5 days
- a years) + cost of the QC department). [Figures based on UL's
- ISO 9000 registration figures.]
-
- o Will the employees be happily willing to work in this tight
- "document everything you do" framework?
-
- Advantages:
-
- o "ISO approved" seems to be a green signal for the European
- customers to buy a product.
-
- If ISO 9000 is forseen as a "way to go" for the future in US/World then
- it would be a good idea to start early.
-
- [I wish to thank Sandeep Phadke <sandeep@acsc.com>, who attended a
- seminar on ISO 9000 recently, for this USENET interview.]
-
- You'll find a more detailed and precise explanation of ISO 9000 with
- anonymous ftp in ftp.uni-erlangen.de:pub/doc/ISO/ISO-9000-summary.
- This is perhaps the most interesting file about ISO 9000 of those that
- you may get by sending the lines
-
- GET ISONEWS F02
- GET ISONEWS F03
- [...]
- GET ISONEWS F11
-
- to LISTSERV@PUCC.PRINCETON.EDU, a mail server.
-
-
- What's the address of my national standards body?
- -------------------------------------------------
-
- The address of the ISO headquarters is:
-
- International Organization
- for Standardization
- Case postale 56
- 1, rue de VarembΘ
- CH-1211 GenΦve 20
- Switzerland
-
- national (022) 749 01 11 (In correct and complete
- Telephone ------------------------------- CCITT E.123 notation :-)
- international +41 22 749 01 11
-
- Telefax +41 22 733 34 30
- Telex 41 22 05 iso ch
- Telegrams isorganiz
-
- And here comes a list of the current 91 member bodies of ISO. According
- to ISO regulations, only one organization "most representative of
- standardization in its country" is allowed to be ISO member body in
- each country. Revisions to the following addresses are announced in the
- monthly ISO Bulletin. The author of this FAQ has currently no access to
- the ISO Bulletin, so it is up to the better informed reader whether this
- list will stay up to date. The addresses in this list are from the
- official ISO member list from september 1992 and have been typed in as
- an 8-bit ISO 8859-1 Latin 1 file by Inge A. Suhr.
-
- Each Organization with a '*' is a sales agent for ISO publications in
- its country. The names of the countries are given in both English and
- French (seems to be an old ISO tradition ;-).
-
- TP = Telephone
- TF = Telefax
- TX = Telex
- TG = Telegrams
-
- Albania/Albanie (DSMA)
- *Drejtoria e Standardeve dhe e
- Mjeteve Martδsδ nδ Ministrinδ e
- Ekonomisδ
- Bulevardi: Dδshmorδt e Kombit
- TIRANA
- TF 2 62 55
- TX 42 95 koplan ab
- TG standardi tirana
-
- Algeria/AlgΘrie (INAPI)
- *Institut algΘrien de normalisation
- et de propriΘtΘ industrielle
- 5, rue Abou Hamou Moussa
- B.P. 1021 - Centre de tri
- ALGER
- TP +213 2 63 51 80
- TF +213 2 61 09 71
- TX 6 64 09 inapi dz
- TG inapi-alger
-
- Argentina/Argentine (IRAM)
- Instituto Argentino de
- Racionalizaci≤n de Materiales
- Chile 1192
- 1098 BUENOS AIRES
- TP +54 1 383 37 51
- TF +54 1 383 84 63
- TX 2 60 86 iflex ar
-
- Australia/Australie (SAA)
- *Standards Association of Australia
- P.O. Box 1055,
- STRATHFIELD - N.S.W. 2135
- TP +61 2 746 47 00
- TF +61 2 746 84 50
- TX 2 65 14 astan aa
- TG austandard north sydney
-
- Austria/Autriche (ON)
- *╓sterreichisches
- Normungsinstitut
- Heinestra▀e 38
- Postfach 130
- A-1021 WIEN
- TP +43 1 26 75 35
- TF +43 1 26 75 52
- TX 11 59 60 norm a
- TG austrianorm
-
- Bangladesh (BSTI)
- *Bangladesh Standards and
- Testing Institution
- 116-A, Tejgaon Industrial Area
- DHAKA-1208
- TP +880 2 88 14 62
- TG besteye
-
- Belgium/Belgique (IBN)
- *Institut belge de normalisation
- Av. de la Brabanτonne 29
- B-1040 BRUXELLES
- TP +32 2 734 92 05
- TF +32 2 733 42 64
- TX 2 38 77 benor b
- TG benor
-
- Brazil/BrΘsil (ABNT)
- *Associaτπo Brasileira de Normas
- TΘcnicas
- Av. 13 de Maio, n║ 13-28║ andar
- Caixa Postal 1680
- CEP: 20.003 - RIO DE JANEIRO-RJ
- TP +55 21 210 31 22
- TF +55 21 532 21 43
- TX 213 43 33 abnt br
- TG normatΘcnica rio
-
- Bulgaria/Bulgarie (BDS)
- *ComitΘ de normalisation
- certification et mΘtrologie
- auprΦs du Conseil des Ministres
- 21, rue du 6-Septembre
- 1000 SOFIA
- TP +359 2 85 91
- TF +359 2 80 14 02
- TX 2 25 70 dks bg
- TG techprogress
-
- Canada (SCC)
- *Standards Council of Canada
- 45 O'Connor Street, Suite 1200
- OTTAWA, ONTARIO
- K1P 6N7
- TP +1 613 238 32 22
- TF +1 613 995 45 64
- TX 053 44 03 stancan ott
- TG stancan ottawa
-
- Chile/Chili (INN)
- Instituto Nacional de Normalizaci≤n
- Matφas Cousi±o 64-6║ piso
- Casilla 995 - Correo Central
- SANTIAGO
- TP +56 2 696 81 44
- TF +56 2 696 02 47
- TG inn
-
- China/Chine (CSBTS)
- China State Bureau of Technical
- Supervision
- 4, Zhi Chun Road
- Haidian District
- P.O. Box 8010
- BEIJING
- TP +86 1 202 58 35
- TF +86 1 203 10 10
- TG 1918 beijing
-
- Colombia/Colombie (ICONTEC)
- *Instituto Colombiano de Normas
- TΘcnicas
- Carrea 37 No. 52-95, Edificio
- ICONTEC
- P.O. Box 14237
- SANTAF╔ DE BOGOTA
- TP +57 1 222 05 71
- TF +57 1 222 14 35
- TG icontec
-
- Croatia, Rep. of/Croatie, RΘp. de
- State Department for Standardization
- and Metrology of Croatia
- Avenija Vukovar 78
- 41000 ZAGREB
- TP +385 41 633 444
- TF +385 41 536 598
-
- Cuba (NC)
- *ComitΘ Estatal de Normalizaci≤n
- Egido 610 entre Gloria y Apodaca
- Zona postal 2
- LA HABANA
- TF +53 7 62 15 03
- TF +53 7 62 76 57
- TX 51 22 45 cen cu
- TG cen havana
-
- Cyprus/Chypre (CYS)
- Cyprus Organization for Standards
- and Control of Quality
- Ministry of Commerce and Industry
- NICOSIA
- TP +357 2 30 34 41
- TF +357 2 36 61 20
- TX 22 83 mincomin cy
- TG mincommind nicosia
-
- Czech and Slovak Federal (still?)
- Republic/RΘpublique fΘdΘrative
- tchΘque et slovaque (CSN)
- *Federal Office for Standards and
- Measurements
- VßclavskΘ nßmesti 19
- 113 47 PRAHA 1
- TP +42 2 235 21 52
- TF +42 2 26 57 95
- TX 12 19 48 funm c
- TG normalizace
-
- Denmark/Danemark (DS)
- *Dansk Standardiseringsraad
- Baunegaardsvej 73
- DK-2900 HELLERUP
- TP +45 39 77 01 01
- TF +45 39 77 02 02
- TX 11 92 03 ds stand
- TG danskstandard
- Email ds@itc.dk
-
- Egypt, Arab Republic of/
- ╔gypte, RΘp. arabe d' (EOS)
- *Egyptian Organization for
- Standardization and Quality Control
- 2 Latin America Street
- Garden City
- CAIRO
- TP +20 2 354 97 20
- TF +20 2 355 78 41
- TX 9 32 96 eos un
- TG tawhid
-
- Ethiopia/╔thiopie (ESA)
- *Ethiopian Authority for
- Standardization
- P.O. Box 2310
- ADDIS ABABA
- TP +251 1 18 51 06
- TX 2 17 25 ethsa et
- TG ethiostan
-
- Finland/Finlande (SFS)
- *Suomen Standardisoimisliitto SFS
- P.O. Box 116
- SF-00241 HELSINKI
- TP +358 0149 93 31
- TF +358 0146 49 25
- TX 12 23 03 stand sf
- TG finnstandard
-
- France (AFNOR)
- *Association franτaise de
- normalisation
- Tour Europe
- Cedex 7
- F-92049 PARIS LA D╔FENSE
- TP +331 42 91 55 55
- TF +331 42 91 56 56
- TX 61 19 74 afnor f
- TG afnor courbevoie
-
- Germany/Allemagne (DIN)
- *DIN Deutsches Institut fⁿr
- Normung
- Burggrafenstra▀e 6
- D-10787 BERLIN
- TP +49 30 26 01 0
- TF +49 30 26 01 12 31
- TX 18 42 73 din d
- TG deutschnormen berlin
-
- Ghana (GSB)
- *Ghana Standards Board
- P.O. Box M-245
- ACCRA
- TP +233 21 66 26 06
- TX 25 45 mincom gh
- TG stanbord
-
- Greece/GrΦce (ELOT)
- *Hellenic Organization for
- Standardization
- 313, Acharnon Street
- GR-111 45 ATHENS
- TP +30 1 201 50 25
- TF +30 1 202 07 76
- TX 21 96 70 elot gr
- TG elotyp-athens
-
- Hungary/Hongrie (MSZH)
- *Magyar Szabvßnyⁿgyi Hivatal
- 1450 BUDAPEST 9
- Pf.24.
- TP +36 1 118 30 11
- TF +36 1 118 51 25
- TX 22 57 23 norm h
- TG normhungaria budapest
-
- India/Inde (BIS)
- *Bureau of Indian Standards
- Manak Bhavan
- 9 Bahadur Shah Zafar Marg
- NEW DEHLI 110002
- TP +91 11 331 79 91
- TF +91 11 331 40 62
- TX 316 58 70 bis in
- TG manaksanstha
-
- Indonesia/IndonΘsie (DSN)
- *Dewan Standardisasi
- Nasional - DSN
- (Standardization Council of Indonesia)
- Sasana Widya Sarwono Lt. 5
- Jalan Jend. Gatot Subroto 10
- JAKARTA 12710
- TP +62 21 520 66 74
- TF +62 21 520 72 26
- TX 6 28 75 pdii ia
- TG lipi jakarta
-
- Iran, Islamic Rep. of/
- RΘp. islamique d' (ISIRI)
- *Institute of Standards and
- Industrial Research of Iran
- Ministry of Industry
- P.O. Box 15875-4618
- TEHRAN
- TP +98 21 89 93 08
- TF +98 21 89 53 05
- TX 21 27 96 inmi ir
- TG standinst
-
- Iraq (COSQC)
- Central Organization for
- Standardization and Quality Control
- Ministry of Planning
- P.O. Box 13032
- Aljadiria
- BAGHDAD
- TP +964 1 776 51 80
- TF +964 1 776 57 81
- TX 21 35 05 cosqc
- TG iros baghdad
-
- Ireland/Irlande (NSAI)
- *National Standards Authority
- of Ireland
- Glasnevin
- DUBLIN-9
- TP +353 1 37 01 01
- TF +353 1 36 98 21
- TX 3 25 01 iirs ei
- TG research, dublin
-
- Iceland/Islande (STRI)
- Islandic Council for Standardization
- Technological Institute of Iceland
- Keldnaholt
- IS-112 REYKJAVIK
- TP +354 1 68 70 00
- TF +354 1 68 74 09
- TX 30 20 istech is
-
- Israel/Israδl (SII)
- *Standards Institution of Israel
- 42 Chaim Levanon Street
- TEL AVIV 69977
- TP +972 3 646 51 54
- TF +972 3 641 96 83
- TX 3 55 08 siit il
- TG standardis
-
- Italy/Italie (UNI)
- *Ente Nazionale Italiano di
- Unificazione
- Via Battistotti Sassi 11
- I-20133 MILANO
- TP +39 2 70 02 41
- TF +39 2 70 10 61 06
- TX 31 24 81 uni i
- TG unificazione
-
- Jamaica/Jama∩que (JBS)
- *Jamaica Bureau of Standards
- 6 Winchester Road
- P.O. Box 113
- KINGSTON 10
- TP +500 809 926 31 40-6
- TF +500 809 921 53 29
- TX 22 91 stanbur
- TG stanbureau jamaica
-
- Japan/Japon (JISC)
- *Japanese Industrial Standards
- Committee
- c/o Standards Department Agency
- of Industrial Science and
- Technology
- Ministry of International Trade
- and Industry
- 1-3-1, Kasumigaseki, Chiyoda-ku
- TOKYO 100
- TP +81 3 35 01 92 95/6
- TF +81 3 35 80 14 18
- TX 02 42 42 45 jsatyo j
- TG mitijisc tokyo
-
- For sales information in Japan
- also:
-
- Japan Standards Association (JSA)
- 1-24 Akasaka, 4-Chome, Minato-Ku
- TOKYO 107
- Japan/Japon
- TP +81 3 35 82 89 68
- TF +81 3 35 86 20 14
-
- Kenya (KEBS)
- *Kenya Bureau of Standards
- Off Mombassa Road
- Behind Belle Vue Cinema
- P.O. Box 54974
- NAIROBI
- TP +254 2 50 22 10/19
- TX 2 52 52 viwango
- TG kenstand
-
- Korea, Dem. P. Rep. of/
- CorΘe, RΘp. dΘm. p. de (CSK)
- Committee for Standardization of
- the Democratic People's Republic
- of Korea
- Zung Gu Yok Seungli-Street
- PYONGYANG
- TP +57 15 76
- TX 59 72 tech kp
- TG standard
-
- Korea, Rep. of/
- CorΘe, RΘp. de (KBS)
- *Bureau of Standards
- Industrial Advancement
- Administration
- 2, Chungang-dong, Kwachon-city
- KYONGGI-DO 427-010
- TP +82 2 503 79 28
- TF +82 2 503 79 41
- TX 2 84 56 fincen k
- TG koreaiaa
-
- Libyan Arab Jamahiriya/
- Jamahiriya Arabe Libyenne (LNCSM)
- Libyan National Centre for
- Standardization and Metrology
- Industrial Research Centre Building
- P.O. Box 5178
- TRIPOLI
- TP +218 21 469 37
- TF +218 21 469 37
- TX 205 49 ncsm
-
- Malaysia/Malaisie (SIRIM)
- Standards and Industrial Research
- Institute of Malaysia
- Persiaran Dato' Menteri, Section 2
- P.O. Box 7035, 40911 Sha Alam
- SELANGOR DARUL EHSAN
- TP +60 3 559 26 01
- TF +60 3 550 80 95
- TX ma 3 86 72
- TG sirimsec shah alam
-
- Mexico/Mexique (DGN)
- *Direcci≤n General de Normas
- Calle Puente de Tecamachalco N.║ 6
- Lomas de Tecamachalco
- Secci≤n Fuentes
- Naucalpan de Jußrez
- 53 950 MEXICO
- TP +52 5 520 84 94
- TF +52 5 540 51 53
- TX 177 58 40 imceme
- TG secofi/147
-
- Mongolia/Mongolie (MNIS)
- Mongolian National Institute
- for Standardization
- ULAANBAATAR 37
- TP +3 29 30
- TX 79233 mnis mn
- TG ust ulaanbaatar 37 mn
-
- Morocco/Maroc (SNIMA)
- Service de normalisation industrielle
- marocaine
- 1, place Sefrou (Tour Hassan)
- RABAT
- TP +212 72 45 30
- TX 3 18 72
-
- Netherlands/Pays-Bas (NNI)
- *Nederlands Normalisatie-Instituut
- Kalfjeslaan 2
- P.O. Box 5059
- 2600 GB DELFT
- TP +31 15 69 03 90
- TF +31 15 69 01 90
- TX 3 81 44 nni nl
- TG normalisatie delft
-
- New Zealand/Nouvelle-ZΘlande (SANZ)
- *Standards Association
- of New Zealand
- Private Bag
- WELLINGTON
- TP +64 4 384 21 08
- TF +64 4 384 39 38
- TX 38 50 sanz nz
- TG standards
-
- Norway/NorvΦge (NSF)
- *Norges Standardiseringsforbund
- Postboks 7020 Homansbyen
- N-0306 OSLO 3
- TP +47 2 46 60 94
- TF +47 2 46 44 57
- TX 1 90 50 nsf n
- TG standardisering
-
- Pakistan (PSI)
- *Pakistan Standards Institution
- 39 Garden Road, Saddar
- KARACHI-74400
- TP +92 21 772 95 27
- TF +92 21 772 95 27
- TG peyasai
-
- Philippines (BPS)
- *Bureau of Product Standards
- Department of Trade and Industry
- 361 Sen. Gil. J. Puyat Avenue
- Makati
- METRO MANILA 3117
- TP +63 2 818 57 01
- TF +63 2 817 98 70
- TX 1 48 30 mti ps
- TG philstand manila
-
- Poland/Pologne (PKNMIJ)
- *Polish Committee for
- Standardization,
- Measures and Quality Control
- UI. Elektoralna 2
- 00-139 WARSZAWA
- TP +48 22 20 54 34
- TF +48 22 20 83 78
- TX 81 36 42 pkn pl
- TG pekanim
-
- Portugal (IPQ)
- *Instituto PortuguΩs da Qualidade
- Rua JosΘ EstΩvπo, 83-A
- P-1199 LISBOA CODEX
- TP +351 1 52 39 78
- TF +351 1 53 00 33
- TX 1 30 42 qualit p
-
- Romania/Roumanie (IRS)
- *Institut roumain de normalisation
- 13, rue Jean-Lois Calderon
- Code 70201
- BUCAREST 2
- TP +400 11 14 40
- TF +400 12 08 23
- TX 1 13 12 irs ro
-
- Russian Federation/
- FΘdΘration de Russie (GOST)
- State Committee for Standardization,
- Metrology and Certification
- Leninsky Prospekt 9
- MOSKVA 117049
- TP +7 095 236 40 44
- TF +7 095 236 82 09
- TX 41 13 78 gost su
- TG moskva standart
-
- Saudi Arabia/
- Arabie Saoudite (SASO)
- *Saudi Arabian Standards
- Organization
- P.O. Box 3437
- RIYADH - 11471
- TP +966 1 479 30 46
- TF +966 1 479 30 63
- TX 40 16 10 saso sj
- TG giasy
-
- Singapore/Singapour (SISIR)
- *Singapore Institute of Standards
- and Industrial Research
- 1 Science Park Drive
- SINGAPORE 0511
- TP +65 778 77 77
- TF +65 778 00 86
- TX rs 2 84 99 sisir
- TG sisir
-
- Slovenia, Rep. of/SlovΘnie, RΘp. de
- (SMIS)
- Standards and Metrology Institute
- of Slovenia
- Ministry of Science and Technology
- Slovenska 50
- 61000 LJUBLJANA
- TP +38 61 11 11 07
- TF +38 61 12 42 88
-
- South Africa, Rep. of/
- Afrique du Sud, RΘp. d' (SABS)
- *South African Bureau of
- Standards
- Private Bag X191
- PRETORIA 0001
- TP +27 12 428 79 11
- TF +27 12 344 15 68
- TX 32 13 08 sa
- TG comparator
-
- Spain/Espagne (AENOR)
- Asociaci≤n Espa±ola de
- Normalizaci≤n y Certificaci≤n
- Calle Fernßndez de la Hoz, 52
- E-28010 MADRID
- TP +34 1 310 48 51
- TF +34 1 310 49 76
- TX 4 65 45 unor e
- TG aenor
-
- Sri Lanka (SLSI)
- *Sri Lanka Standards Institution
- 53 Dharmapala Mawatha
- P.O. Box 17
- COLOMBO 3
- TP +94 1 22 60 51
- TF +94 1 44 60 18
- TG pramika
-
- Sweden/SuΦde (SIS)
- *SIS - Standardiseringskommissionen
- i Sverige
- Box 3295
- S-103 66 STOCKHOLM
- TP +46 8 613 52 00
- TF +46 8 11 70 35
- TX 1 74 53 sis s
- TG standardis
-
- Switzerland/Suisse (SNV)
- *Swiss Association for
- Standardization
- Mⁿlebachstr. 54
- CH-8008 Z▄RICH
- TP +41 1 254 54 54
- TF +41 1 254 54 74
- TX 75 59 31 snv ch
- TG normbureau
-
- Syria/Syrie (SASMO)
- *Syrian Arab Organization for
- Standardization and Metrology
- P.O. Box 11836
- DAMASCUS
- TP +963 11 45 05 38
- TF +41 19 99 sasmo
- TG systand
-
- Tanzania/Tanzanie (TBS)
- *Tanzania Bureau of Standards
- P.O. Box 9524
- DAR ES SALAAM
- TP +255 51 4 80 51
- TF +255 51 4 80 51
- TX 4 16 67 tbs tz
- TG standards
-
- Thailand/Tha∩lande (TISI)
- *Thai Industrial Standards Institute
- Minstry of Industry
- Rama IV Street
- BANGKOK 10400
- TP +66 2 245 78 02
- TF +66 2 247 87 41
- TX 8 43 75 minidus th
- (attention tisi)
- TH thastan
-
- Trinidad and Tobago/
- TinitΘ-et-Tobago (TTBS)
- *Trinidad and Tobago Bureau
- of Standards
- P.O. Box 467
- PORT OF SPAIN
- TP +1 809 662 88 27
- TF +1 809 663 43 35
- TG qualassure
-
- Tunisia/Tunisie (INNORPI)
- Institut national de la normalisation
- et de la propriΘtΘ industrielle
- B.P. 23
- 1012 TUNIS-BELV╔D╚RE
- TP +216 1 78 59 22
- TF +216 1 78 15 63
- TX 1 36 02 inorpi tn
-
- Turkey/Turquie (TSE)
- *Tⁿrk Standardlari Enstitⁿsⁿ
- Necatibey Cad. 112
- Bakanliklar
- 06100 ANKARA
- TP +90 4 417 83 30
- TF +90 4 125 43 99
- TX 4 20 47 tse-tr
- TG standard
-
- United Kingdom/
- Royaume-Uni (BSI)
- *British Standards Institution
- 2 Park Street
- GB-LONDON W1A 2BS
- TP +44 71 629 90 00
- TF +44 71 629 05 06
- TX 35 69 33 bsilon g
- TG standards london w.1
-
- Uruguay (UNIT)
- Instituto Uruguayo de Normas
- TΘcnicas
- San JosΘ 1031 P.7
- Galeria ElysΘe
- MONTEVIDEO
- TP +598 2 91 20 48
- TF +598 2 92 16 81
- TX 2 31 68 ancap uy
-
- USA (ANSI)
- *American National Standards
- Institute
- 11 West 42nd Street
- 13th floor
- NEW YORK, N.Y. 10036
- TP +1 212 642 49 00
- TF +1 212 398 00 23
- TX 42 42 96 ansi ui
- TG standards, new york
-
- Venezuela (COVENIN)
- *Comisi≤n Venezolana de Normas
- Industriales
- Avda. AndrΘs Bello
- Edf. Torre Fondo Com·n
- Piso 12
- CARACAS 1050
- TP +58 2 575 22 98
- TF +58 2 574 13 12
- TX 2 42 35 minfo vc
- TG covenindus
-
- Viet Nam, Socialist Republic of/
- RΘpublique socialiste du (TCVN)
- General Department for
- Standardization, Metrology
- and Quality
- 70, Tran Hung Dao Street
- Box 81
- HANOI
- TP +84 4 25 63 75
- TF +84 8 9 30 12
- TX 41 22 87 ukkn vt
- TG vinastand
-
- Yugoslavia/Yougoslavie (SZS)
- *Savezni zavod za standardizaciju
- Slobodana Penezica Krcuna br. 35
- Post Pregr. 933
- YU-11000 BEOGRAD
- TP +38 11 64 40 66
- TF +38 11 235 10 36
- TX 1 20 89 jus yu
- TG standardizacija
-
- Zimbabwe (SAZ)
- Standards Association
- of Zimbabwe
- P.O. Box 2259
- HARARE
- TP +263 4 70 60 52
- TG saca
-
-
- Correspondent members
-
- "A correspondent member is normally an organization in a developing
- country which does not yet have its own national standards body.
- Correspondent members do not take an active part in the technical
- work, but are entitled to be kept fully informed about the work of
- interest to them. Nearly all the present correspondent members are
- governmental institutions." [from: ISO member list]
-
- Bahrain
- Directorate of Standards
- and Metrology
- Ministry of Commerce
- and Agriculture
- P.O. Box 5479
- BAHRAIN
- TP +973 53 01 00
- TF +973 53 04 55
- TX 91 71 tejara bn
-
- Barbados/Barbade
- Barbados National Standards
- Institution (BNSI)
- "Flodden" Culloden Road
- ST. MICHAEL
- TP +500 809 426 38 70
- TF +500 809 436 14 95
- TX barstand, barbados
-
- Brunei Darussalam/
- BrunΘi Darussalam
- Construction Planning and
- Research Unit
- Ministry of Development
- NEGARA BRUNEI DARUSSALAM
- TP +673 2 24 20 33
- TF +673 2 24 22 67
- TX 27 22 midev bu
- TG midevbrunei
-
- Hong Kong
- Industry Department
- Hong Kong Government
- 14/F. Ocean Centre
- 5 Canton Road
- Kowloon
- HONG KONG
- TP +852 829 48 24
- TF +852 824 13 02
- TX 5 01 51 indhk hx
-
- Jordan/Jordanie
- Directorate of Standards and
- Measures
- Ministry of Industry and Trade
- P.O. Box 2019
- AMMAN
- TP +962 6 66 31 91
- TF +962 6 60 37 21
- TX 2 11 63 mintr jo
-
- Kuwait/Kowe∩t
- Standards and Metrology
- Department
- Ministry of Commerce and Industry
- Post Box No. 2944 Safat
- 13030 KUWAIT
- TF +965 242 44 11
- TX 2 26 82 commind kt
-
- Republic of Lithuania/
- RΘpublique de Lituanie
- Lithuanian State Standardization
- Office (LST)
- A. Jaksto g. 1/25
- 2600 VILNIUS
- TP +7 012 222 69 62
- TF +7 012 222 62 52
-
- Madagascar
- Direction de la qualitΘ
- et de la mΘtrologie lΘgale
- B.P. 1316
- 101 ANTANANARIVO
- TP +261 2 238 60
- TX 22 378 min co mg
-
- Malawi
- Malawi Bureau of Standards
- P.O. Box 946
- BLANTYRE
- TP +265 67 04 88
- TF +265 67 07 56
- TX 4 43 25
- TG standards
-
- Mali
- Direction nationale des Industries
- du Mali
- MinistΦre de l'Θconomie
- et des finances
- B.P. 278
- BAMAKO
- TP +223 22 57 56
- TF +223 22 88 53
- TX 2559 mj
-
- Malta/Malte
- Malta Board of Standards
- Department of Industry
- St. George's
- Cannon Road
- SANTA VENERA
- TP +356 44 62 50
- TF +356 44 62 57
-
- Mauritius/Ile Maurice
- Mauritius Standards Bureau
- Ministry of Industry and Industrial
- Technology
- REDUIT
- TP +230 454 19 33
- TF +230 464 11 44
- TX 42 49 extern iw
-
- Nepal/NΘpal
- Nepal Bureau of Standards
- and Metrology
- B.P. Box 985
- Sundhara
- KATHMANDU
- TP +977 1 27 26 89
- TG gunis
-
- Oman, Sultanate of/Sultanat d'
- Directorate General for
- Specifications and Measurements
- Ministry of Commerce and Industry
- P.O. Box 550
- MUSCAT
- TP +968 70 47 83
- TF +968 79 59 92
- TX 36 65 wizara on
- TG wizarah
-
- Papua New Guinea/
- Papouasie-Nouvelle-GuinΘe (PNGS)
- National Standards Council
- P.O. Box 3042
- BOROKO
- TP +675 27 21 02
- TF +675 25 24 03
-
- Seychelles, Rep. of/RΘp. des
- Department of Industry
- P.O. Box 648
- Bel Eau
- MAHE
- TP +248 2 50 60
- TF +248 2 50 86
- TX 24 22 ind sz
-
- Uganda/Ouganda
- Uganda National Bureau
- of Standards
- P.O. Box 6329
- KAMPALA
- TP +256 41 25 86 69
- TG mincom kampala
-
- United Arab Emirates/
- ╔mirats Arabes Unis
- Directorate of Standardization
- and Metrology
- P.O. Box 433
- ABU DHABI
- TP +971 2 72 60 00
- TF +971 2 77 33 01
- TX 2 29 37 fedfin em
-
-
- References
- ----------
-
- Carl F. Cargill
- Information Technology Standardization
- Theory, Process, and Organizations
- 1989 DEC Digital Press
- ISBN 1-55558-022-X
-
- The book gives a good survey of standardization in the realm of
- information technology.
-
- Taylor, Dave
- Global Software
- Springer-Verlag, 1992
- ISBN: 0-387-97706-6 / 3-540-99706-6
-
- Might prove quite helpful for people trying to understand the
- complexities of internationalization for the first time and
- explains also international and de-facto standards in this area.
-
- StandardView
-
- This is an ACM publication about computer related standardization
- issues. The editor-in-chief's address is Carl Cargill, Sun Microsystems,
- 2550 Garcia Avenue, MTV01-05, Mountain View, CA 94043, email
- <Carl.Cargill@eng.sun.com>.
-
-
- I wish to thank the following people and others for their contributions
- to this text (and the osi-protocols FAQ):
-
- David Gay <dgay@di.epfl.ch>
- Kit Lueder <kit@gateway.mitre.org>
- Don Provan <donp@novell.com>
- David Torr <dave@philips.oz.au>
- See-Mong Tan <stan@ncb.gov.sg>
- Harald Tveit Alvestrand <Harald.Alvestrand@delab.sintef.no>
- Kerry Raymond <kerry@citr.uq.oz.au>
- Alasdair Grant <AG129@PHOENIX.CAMBRIDGE.ac.uk>
- Lakshmoji Rao <R.Lakshmoji@frec.bull.fr>
- John A. Shriver <jas@proteon.com>
- Ketil Albertsen <ketil@edb.tih.no>
- K.C. Chan <kchan@monu6.cc.monash.edu.au>
- Alex McKenzie <mckenzie@BBN.COM>
- John Levine <johnl@iecc.cambridge.ma.us>
- Peter Desnoyers <peterd@merlin.dev.cdx.mot.com>
- Keld Simonsen <keld@login.dkuug.dk>
- Bancroft Scott <baos@oss.oss.com>
- Bill Stallings <72500.3562@CompuServe.COM>
- Jutta Degener <jutta@cs.tu-berlin.de>
- Norbert Gerfelder <gerfi@igd.fhg.de>
- Kristy Brown <mkb@anubis.network.com>
- Uwe Kunzler <pla_uku@pki-nbg.philips.de>
- Sandeep Phadke <sandeep@acsc.com>
- James W. Reese <R505040@UNIVSCVM.CSD.SCAROLINA.EDU>
- Inge A. Suhr <etxias@mega.ericsson.se>
- Ed Ravin <eravin@Panix.Com>
- Simon Spero <ses@sunsite.unc.edu>
- Chris Johnson <Chris.Johnson@cs.anu.edu.au>
- Bob Goudreau <goudreau@dg-rtp.dg.com>
- Robert Corbett <Robert.Corbett@Eng.Sun.COM>
- Dave Taylor <taylor@netcom.com>
- Tim Moors <tim@atri.curtin.edu.au>
- Michael Welser <mwelser@iaik.tu-graz.ac.at>
- Mark Brader <msb@sq.com>
- Arthur Marsh <Arthur@cswamp.apana.org.au>
- Matthias Krippendorf <Matthias.Krippendorf@arbi.informatik.uni-oldenburg.de>
- Gary Brown <gsb@csi.compuserve.com>
- Christoph Badura <bad@flatlin.ka.sub.org>
- Brad Smith <smithb@lurch.cme.nist.gov>
- John Williams <mla05@seq1.kl.ac.uk>
- Kees Pronk <kees@dutiba.twi.tudelft.nl>
- Jan Schipmolder <schip@sgi428.msd.lmsc.lockheed.com>
- Tahir Kapetanovic <nm_kapet@aaf.alcatel.at>
- Reto Beeler <beeler@tech.ascom.ch>
- Rudolf Roth <roth@fokus.berlin.gmd.d400.de>
- Robert Shaw <ROBERT.SHAW@itu.ch>
- Martin "J." Duerst <mduerst@ifi.unizh.ch>
- Eberhard Wegner <E.Wegner@gmd.de>
- Vasilii Zakharov <Zakharov@isocs.iso.ch>
- Fritz Whittington <fritz@ti.com>
-
- [End of Standards FAQ]
-
- --
- Markus Kuhn, Computer Science student ½░o░╗ University of Erlangen, Germany
- Internet: mskuhn@cip.informatik.uni-erlangen.de | X.500 entry available
-