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For more information about the TAB and its work, visit
the TAB's home page.
Abbie Barbir, Ph.D., (abbieb@nortel.com) is a
member of Nortel's Strategic Standards group, where he serves
as Senior Advisor in the areas of Web services and Security.
This role has involved him in many activities within OASIS,
W3C, WS-I, OMA, ITU-T, Canadian Advisory Committee (CAC) JTC1
SC6, IETF, Parlay and IPSphere. He currently chairs the
Cybersecurity question in ITU-T SG17 and is the vice chair of
the CAC for JTC1 SC 6. In 2005, he represented OASIS to ITU-T
and was instrumental in having the ITU-T consent the SAML and
XACML OASIS Standards as ITU-T Recommendations. Abbie holds a
Ph.D. in Computer Engineering from Louisiana State University
in Baton Rouge, USA. In his more than 20 years in the software
and telecommunication industry, he has been a professor of
Computer Science in Western Carolina University, an
application developer, data compression and encryption
inventor, systems architect, security architect, engineering
manager, consultant, author, and inventor of numerous security
algorithms. His term on the TAB extends to July 2010.
Martin Chapman, Ph.D., (martin.chapman@oracle.com)
joined Oracle Corporation in 2002 where he holds the position
of Consulting Member Technical Staff and focuses on Web
Services standards activities. This role has involved him in a
plethora of web service activities within W3C, OASIS, WS-I,
and ISO. He currently chairs the W3C Web Services Choreography
Working Group and the OASIS Web Services Composite Application
Framework TC. Martin gained a Ph.D. in Distributed Computing
from Oxford Polytechnic and Rutherford Appleton Laboratory,
UK, in 1989. From 1989 to 1996 he worked at BT Laboratories,
Martlesham Heath, UK, where his principal task was in applying
distributed object technology to the telecommunications
industry. He joined IONA Technologies in 1996 and served as
their prime representative to the OMG. During that time he
authored several CORBA specifications and was elected to be a
member of the OMG Architecture Board. His term on the TAB
extends to July 2009.
Toby Considine (toby.considine@unc.edu)
of the University of North Carolina co-chairs the TAB. He is
also chair of the OASIS oBIX Technical Committee, where he
works to expose the deep processes of the engineered systems
in buildings and the grid as services responsive to the
enterprise and the tenant. Toby has provided business process
analysis and software services within the education,
manufacturing, distribution, and architecture industries. He
is a regular speaker in organizations ranging from APPA
(educational facilities) to AIIM (image management) to the
NCCC (CAD technologies and business integration). Toby's work
at standards groups includes buildingSmart and GridWise. His
term on the TAB extends to July 2010.
William Cox, Ph.D., (wtcox@comcast.net)
co-chairs the TAB. He has developed enterprise product
architectures for Bell Labs, Unix System Labs, Novell, and
BEA, and has done related work in OASIS, ebXML, the Java
Community Process, OMG, and the IEEE, often working at the
boundaries between technology and business requirements.. He
was lead architect for Unix System V Release 4 and of
follow-on highly scalable and secure Unix systems,
service-oriented architectures and directory APIs for Novell,
Web services and XML messaging and transaction systems, and
other enterprise software. He earned a Ph.D. and M.S. in
Computer Sciences from the University of Wisconsin-Madison.
Today Bill concentrates on Transaction technologies, portal
technologies, XML, Web services, and Java expressions of those
standards. He is a member of the OASIS WSRP, Business
Transaction, and eGovernment TCs and a past member of the Java
Community Process Executive Committee and the OMG Board. He is
a co-author of the Business Transaction Processing Primer and
of WS-Transaction and WS-Coordination. His term on the TAB
extends to July 2009.
Jacques Durand Ph.D., (JDurand@us.fujitsu.com)
director of Engineering and Standards at Fujitsu Software,
evaluates and promotes XML-related and eBusiness standards,
and advises on their use in the enterprise software products
at Fujitsu. He has actively been involved in ebXML and Web
services as a member of the OASIS ebXML Messaging Services TC,
chair of the OASIS ebXML Implementation, Interoperability and
Conformance (IIC) TC, and co-editor of the OASIS
WS-Reliability TC. He has an interest in conformance and
testing technology, coordinating with OASIS an initiative to
facilitate conformance and interoperability testing for OASIS
Standards.
Jacques is actively involved in WS-I and chaired its
Testing Tools working group. He is also member of the OMG
Production Rules Representation BEIDTF. He has more than 25
years of experience in various areas of software, ranging from
R & D to commercial products. He holds a Ph.D. from Nancy
Univ (France) in logic programming. His term on the TAB
extends to July 2010.
Andy Lee, Ph.D., (javola@vip.sina.com)
heads the technical committee of China's Changfeng Open
Standards Platform Software Alliance. His accomplishments in
the area of open standards includes: the development of cnXML,
a project which introduced XML technology to China's IT
industry; the development of an XML standard suite in China's
e-Government reference model and reference architecture; key
participation in the adoption of ebXML as China's national
eBusiness standard; recognition of Rossettanet as the official
e-Logistical standard for China; and the development of SOA
EERP, which is regarded as an emerging industry standard in
next generation enterprise applications. Andy has also served
as China's senior eBusiness advisor and acted as the national
major eBusiness project technical reviewer since 2002. He
holds a Master's degree in fluid dynamics from Shanghai
JiaoTong University and a Ph.D. in electrical engineering from
Stanford University. His term on the TAB extends to July 2010.
Hal Lockhart (hal.lockhart@oracle.com)
represents Oracle in information security-related standards
activities at various bodies including OASIS, WS-I, EPCGlobal,
JCP, W3C, Liberty Alliance, OMG, and Open Group. He is the
co-chair of the OASIS XACML TC, co-chair of the OASIS Security
Services (SAML) TC, and an active member of a number of other
TCs including WS-SX. In his more than 30 years in the software
industry, Mr. Lockhart has been an application developer,
kernel engineer, systems architect, engineering manager,
operations manager, consultant, author, Director of Security
and standards representative. His term on the TAB extends to
July 2009.
Mary McRae (mary.mcrae@oasis-open.org),
Director of Technical Committee Administration, provides
front-line support for OASIS committees and the standards they
produce. She works with OASIS TC chairs, guiding them through
the OASIS technical process and helping them reach the goals
and objectives of their charters. Mary also serves on the
OASIS Technical Advisory Board. She joined the OASIS staff in
2004, but she has been an active member of the Consortium
since 1995, serving on the OASIS Board of Directors in 1999.
Mary became involved in structured markup languages in 1992,
while working for Butterworth Legal Publishers, where she
mastered the nuances of document analysis, DTD development,
structured editors, and content management systems. Later, as
Vice President of XML Solutions and Principal XML Technologist
for DMSi, she used her skills at project management, needs
analysis, requirements definition, product selection, schema
development, application customization, and training to help
clients avoid the pitfalls she encountered herself as an early
adopter. Sandwiched in between, Mary was the Manager of Sales
Support for Xyvision (now XyEnterprise), focusing on SGML/XML
content management solutions. Mary is co-author of "Office
2003 XML" and a frequent speaker at industry conferences. In
her spare time, Mary is a textile artist. She is based in
Bethlehem, New Hampshire, USA.
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