TITLE: | Business Plan for JTC1/SC34 |
SOURCE: | James D. Mason, Acting Chairman, JTC1/SC34 |
PROJECT: | All SC34 Projects |
PROJECT EDITOR: | All SC3G4 Editors |
STATUS: | Chairman's report |
ACTION: | For information of JTC1 |
DATE: | 14 DFecember 1998 |
SUMMARY: | SC34 project status, target dates, assignments, meeting schedule |
DISTRIBUTION: | SC34 and Liaisons |
REFER TO: | SC34 N23, Resolutions of the Chicago Meeting |
SUPERCEDES: | JTC1/WG4 N1970, 1999 Business Plan for JTC1/WG4 |
REPLY TO: | Dr. James David Mason
(ISO/IEC JTC1/SC34 Acting Chairman) Lockheed Martin Energy Systems Information Technology Services 1060 Commerce Park, M.S. 6480 Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6480 U.S.A. Telephone: +1 423 574-6973 Facsimile: +1 423 574-0004 Network: mailto:mxm@ornl.gov http://www.ornl.gov/sgml/sc34/sc34home.htm ftp://ftp.ornl.gov/pub/sgml/wg4/ |
Period Covered: July -- December1998
Submitted by: Dr. James David Mason, ISO/IEC JTC1/SC34 Acting Chairman
Note: Because JTC1/SC34 is the successor organization to two previus bodies, JTC1/SC18/WG8 and JTC1/WG4, many of its projects and liaisons have extensive histories going back before the establishment of SC34.
To produce standards for languages and resources for the description and processing of compound and hypermedia documents, including:
Acting Convenor: Dr. Charles F. Goldfarb
The activities of Working Group 1 include:
Acting Convenor: Dr. Yushi Komachi
The activities of Working Group 2 include:
Acting Convenor: Eliot Kimber
The activities of Working Group 3 include:
SC34 presently has its original two primary projects dating back to JTC1/SC18/WG8, JTC1.34.15, Computer Languages for Processing Text, and JTC1.34.27, Description and Identification of Glyph Fonts. SC34 has also been assigned several later projects, also described below.
SGML is a completed standard for which an amendment has been published. It was reaffirmed by JTC1 balloting at its five-year reviews in 1991 and 1996. A comprehensive internal review to determine what revisions or enhancements are desired as a result of evolving user requirements during SGML's years of use is continuing. The process of finalizing DSSSL and developing a technical corrigendum for HyTime has resulted in additional information that can contribute to a potential revision.The rapid growth of the Internet, particularly the World-Wide Web and XML, has drawn wide attention to SGML and related standards.
An intitial Technical Corrigendum (TC) to support internationalization was adopted the year before last. A TC on support for of use of SGML on the WWW has been adopted and published in the past year. SC34 has just completed a third TC, which has been merged into the second TC; the second TC is being repulished.
Only one project remains under this item, Project JTC1.3415.5.1, Guidelines for SGML Syntax-Directed Editors (ISO TR 10037), which was published as ISO/IEC TR 10037. There is no active work in this area.
Both projects in this group have resulted in ISO standards
DSSSL was published in April 1996. Requirements for modification are under consideration.
SPDL was published in December 1995. No work is active in this project and the project editors believe that the standard has been largely superseded by work in the W3C.
The first and third parts of this project, SDIF (ISO 9069) and Registration (ISO/IEC 9070), have been published. An amendment to ISO/IEC 9070 was approved that provides for equivalencies of structured names in SGML and ASN.1 representations of documents and makes ISO 9070 a generalized naming standard that is aligned with ISO 8824. A second edition of ISO/IEC 9070 has been published.
Techniques for Using SGML (ISO TR 9573) is being revised to add some new parts and to merge informative material that has been carried as parts of other projects. The part on public entities for mathematical and scientific publishing (including material that was in the annexes to ISO 8879) has already been published as Part 13. The part that documents the SGML-based system used by ISO Central Secretariat to produce texts of standards has also been published as Part 11. Another part on public entities for non-Latin alphabets has been balloted as Part 15 and ballot responses are being considered. A part on Using SGML for Computer to Computer Interchange (Notation Declarations for Data Encoding Standards) has been balloted as Part 9, and a final text is being prepared. The proposed Parts 1--6, tutorials on the SGML language and basic techniques, have been deferred completion of the revision process for ISO 8879:1986.
ISO/IEC 9541, Parts 1, Architecture, 2, Interchange Format, and 3, Glyph Shape Representation, and ISO/IEC 10036, Glyph and Glyph Collection Registration Procedures, have been published. A text for Part 4 of 9541, Application-Specific Requirements, has been balloted as a CD; a disposition of comments and new text are being prepared. These standards continue under maintenance. A second amendment to 9541-1 has been balloted; a disposition of comments has been prepared, and final text is being completed.
The Font Services project (JTC1.34.33) balloted a text for Part 1, which passed as a CD. A disposition of comments and a new text were prepared. However, JTC1 asked that the project be reinitiated; a new work item proposal failed for lack of countries willing to participate actively in the work. SC34 has decided to convert the existing text into a TR, so that the work is not lost.
This project, developed within the U.S. National Body (though with international consultation), has been moved into JTC1. Final text has been prepared and will be delivered for publication.
A DIS text for ISO 10743 was balloted, results are being analyzed, and a final text is being prepared.
ISO/IEC 10744 is a published standard. A TC was balloted in 1995, and a final text was published as a second edition of the standard (ISO/IEC 10744:1997). SC34 is processing an amendment and a TC to the revised standard.
This work has been replaced by the Interchange Standard for Modifiable Interactive Documents (ISMID), which is being submitted for Final CD processing.
A CD text for Topic Navigation Maps (CD 13250) has been balloted, and a Final CD has been submitted to SC34.
A CD text (based on HTML 4.0) for an ISO version of HTML (CD 15445) has been balloted. The text for a Final CD has been submitted to SC34.
The project for Interchange Standard for Modifiable Interactive Documents (ISMID) has been approved, replacing the former project JTC1.34.43 (SMSL). A text has been prepared and is being sent for Final CD registration and processing.
SC34's major area of cooperation is with its user community. SC34 has long had a strong liaison with the International SGML Users' Group, which regularly sends a delegation to SC34's meetings. Now, with the Internet making heavy use of HTML, which is a single application of SC34's major standard. SGML, and moving towards XML, which is a potentially very large class of SGML applications, SC34 sees the need for increasing cooperation with the World-Wide Web Consortium (W3C). SC34 has had informal liaison with the W3C for more than a year. SC34 has approved a statement from its W3C represenatives that propses Category C liaison for the W3C.
SC34 has also established liaison with ISO TC184/SC4, which is responsible for STEP/EXPRESS. Both SGML and STEP/EXPRESS are designed to structure collections of data, particularly documentation, and TC184/SC4 has started a new work item to harmonize the approaches of SGML and their standards.SC34 will be glad to prticipate in this work
SC34's relationship with the W3C has so far been quite good. The editors of SC34's ISO-HTML have worked closely with the W3C HTML editor to make sure that the ISO standard reflects the W3C's design. The XML effort began with heavy participation from SC34 experts, and SC34's recent work with technical corrigenda to SGML has been in large measure intended to address issues identified during the development of XML. SC34 has worked with the W3C to ensure that XML is a well-defined subset of the SGML standard from which it is derived. SC34 belives the W3C is ready to establish even stronger liaison. However, there remains a probability that the XML process, being pushed by large corporations that do not participate in the JTC1 activities, will run away from the ISO.
SC34 has long had communication with other JTC1 groups. The Fonts project in SC34 was done in cooperation with SC2, and SC34 members contributed to ISO/IEC 10646. Under its former identity as WG4 held 22 May 1998 a Workshop on Metadata; we expect participation from SC2, SC24, and SC 32, as well as from groups like TC184 which are outside JTC1.
Since SC34 was organized, replacing JTC1/WG4, it has held an initial organizational meeting in November 1998; (There were two meetings as JTC1/WG4, which were reported on in a previous document, JTC1/WG4 N1970, 1999 Business Plan for JTC1/WG4.) SC34 has 13 P members (Australia, Brazil, Canada, China, Denmark, France, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Netherlands, Norway, United Kingdom United States and 2 O members (Germany, Sweden), as well as 2 external liaison bodies (SGML Users' Group and CERN). SC34 also had informal liaison with the World-Wide Web Consortium (W3C) to develop an ISO Standard based on HTML and to support the XML class of SGML applications;SC34 expects this liaison to be made official.
For its continuing high level of activity, SC34 can give several reasons. Aside from the long-standing general interest of SC34's projects to the publishing and technical documentation community, we have continued to benefit from the many organizational adoptions of applications of our work, including an increasing number of governmental and private bodies. We are particularly pleased at the increased presence of SGML on the Internet, notably through the World-Wide Web (WWW). On the WWW most documents are marked up in HTML, which is an application of of SGML. In the past year the W3C's XML (Extensible Markup Language), which is a class of applications of SGML, has gained wide attention and support from major vendors such as Microsoft and Sun. SC34 has worked with the W3C to ensure smooth support for XML in the SGML standard from which it is derived.
SC34 adopted fully electronic distribution of its documents several years ago; it has adopted ISO-HTML (a subset of W3C HTML 4.0) as its distribution format. The SC34 Secretariat at ANSI has established a new official WWW server for SC34 (http://www.jtc1.org/jtc1.asp?SubComm=SC*space*34&Organization=ISO*slash*IEC&TechComm=JTC*space*1).
The SC34 Acting Chariman also maintains both an FTP server (ftp://ftp.ornl.gov/pub/sgml/sc34/) and a WWW server (http://www.ornl.gov/sgml/sc34/sc34home.htm) to provide historical access to SC34, JTC1/WG4, and JTC1/SC18/WG8 documents.
SC34 has begun online discussion of projects between meetings, using a controlled distribution. SC34 expects the use of electronic processing to grow in the next year.
We expect that the next year will maintain the current momentum, sustaining the rapid development of our projects. Our continuing high level of participation this year has been gratifying.
1998 Meetings
Regular meetings | |
Paris, France (as JTC1/WG4) | 11--15 May 1998 |
Chicago, Illinois | 9--13 November 1998 |
Future meetings planned for 1999 include:
Granada, Spain |
19-23 April 1999 |
Philadelphia, PA |
November/December 1999 |
For the present, SC34 intends for its WGs to meet with the SC34 Plenary to facilitate cooperation among projects.
SC34's traditional marketplace was in technical documentation, in large-scale commercial publishing, particularly of reference works, and in several areas such as legal publishing and insurance. The SGML presence in these areas has grown steadily over the past decade. Recognition that HTML was based on SGML raised the visibility of SC34's work considerably. Recognition of the limitations of HTML led to the creation of XML, and interest in that, particularly from the area of electronic commerce, has exploded in the past year. Attendance at the conferences sponsored by the Graphic Communications Association, which have been the historical forum for SGML activities, reflects this growth of interest: the increase has become almost exponential.
On the one hand, SC34 feels good about the interest in its standards. On the other hand, the rapid growth of market demand and the growth of participation in the W3C activities rather than in JTC1, reflects a potential for the JTC1 process to become irrelevant.
In the past year, SC34 has completed a revised version of HyTime and two TCs to SGML. SC34 has an amendment to HyTime, and two amendments to ISO/IEC 9541 in preparation. In addition to our completed ISO standards and technical reports, we have one project at DIS status, one that is out for CD ballot, a Technical Report in preparation, and a new project under development.
SC34's current status is reflected in its documents, notably N0023 Recommendations of the Chicago Meeting, available from the SC34 Web servers.
Adequate resources are available in SC34 for work on SGML and related standards, particularly HyTime. At the recent Chicago meeting of SC34, much of the WG 3 activity was planning for future work on Topic Navigation Maps (CD 13250), which is an application of HyTime. WG 1, having completed its SGML TCs, was able to return to revision of the base standard, ISO 8897:1986.
SC34 is suffering from a lack of resources in the Fonts work. We currently have a project editor, the Acting Convenor of WG2, who also works in the SGML area. Only minimal maintenance is currently possible on this set of standards unless more resources are found.
As the SC34 Programme of Work indicates, we have several documents that are intended for completion in the new reporting period that begins with the May 1998 meeting. Amendments to HyTime and Fonts are nearing completion. SC34 needs to provide final text for TR9575-9, as well as for the older, and almost complete standards SMDL and SGML Conformance.
SC34 is pleased to become a full SC on its own, particularly because it will allow us to establish better liaisons with organzations like the W3C and the ITEF. We also believe SC status will allow us to draw more attention to work that is currently suffering from lack of resources, such as Fonts.
SC34 believes that its move to electronic discusion between formal meetings will increase its productivity and allow quicker response to requirements coming from the industry.
The greatest risk for SC34's projects is that the rate of change in the user community, particularly in that part represented by the W3C, will cause the pace of development of industry application standards to exceed ISO's capacity to respond with prerequisite facilities in our base standards. Fortunately, SC34's working style, with its heavy emphasis on use of the Internet, has so far enabled us to keep pace.
The world of XML presents great opportunities for SGML and related standards. The leadership of the W3C XML committee wants to keep the present alignment between XML and SGML. Making XSL (XML Style Language) a valid application of DSSSL and keeping general alignment between XLL (XML Link Language) and HyTime is also seen as desirable. The W3C seems open to having links between its work and ISO standards and perhaps even of making some of them into ISO standards. TC1 has the opportunity to encourage liaison between SC34 and the W3C by supporting the move of SC34 to full SC status.
SC34 feels that its current emphasis on SGML, HyTime, DSSSL, and work derived from them is appropriate and that it has sufficient resources for that work. Additional resources would also make it possible to do more than the current minimal level of maintenace on the Fonts standards.