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Boston, MA, USA; 14 August 2001 -- Standards groups
and consortia from around the world will gather in Orlando,
Florida, 6-7 December 2001 for the Interoperability Summit,
the first in a series of inter-consortia meetings aimed at
identifying common ground and coordinating development of
electronic business specifications. Hosted by HR-XML, OASIS,
Object Management Group (OMG), UN/CEFACT and XBRL.org, the
Interoperability Summit Series will identify intersections
between major horizontal and vertical groups in order to promote
acceptance of common models and approaches.
"Duplication of effort and overlap of specifications
are major deterrents to interoperability," said Patrick
Gannon, president and chief executive officer of OASIS. "We
believe that if everyone communicates and collaborates on
common issues, we'll all be more productive in achieving our
own specific goals. The summit series will provide a forum
to identify and coordinate the work that affects us all."
"Interoperability across platforms, languages and deployment
technologies is of critical importance to CIOs today,"
said Dr. Richard Soley, chairman and chief executive officer
of the OMG. "OMG's Model Driven Architecture is
specifically designed to attain that goal, and lack of agreement
on vertical-market models is the major roadblock to achieving
the goal. OMG is proud to be one of the sponsors of the Interoperability
Summit event and to act as one of the hosts for this first
meeting."
Each Summit in the series will focus on a specific modeling
topic or business domain. The first meeting will target Human
Resources (HR) management, with future summits dedicated to
other wide-reaching, horizontal business functions. A second
Summit on Procurement is planned for 2002.
"Human resources is an excellent starting point for
the Interoperability Summit Series, since HR shares many common
components and has many external interaction points and dependencies
with other standards efforts," said Chuck Allen, director
of HR-XML Consortium.
Allen cited an example of kind of overlap the Summit is targeting.
"Recently, the National Association of Purchasing Managers
(NAPM) decided to create an XML specification for the procurement
of temporary staffing. That very same week, HR-XML announced
a draft of our specification for temporary staffing. While
it's clear both groups need to create specifications based
on the unique needs of their applications, it is also obvious
some of the objects, processes and models involved could be
common to both. The Interoperability Summit will help us all
identify this kind of overlap, so we can devote our resources
to solving domain-specific requirements."
Capt. Valerie Carpenter, USN program manager of the DIMHRS
project (a Department of Defense-wide military personnel system)
agreed. "The lack of cross domain standards has long
been an obstacle to meaningful interoperability."
The Interoperability Summit is open to all industry groups,
standards bodies and consortia that have a vested interest
in the modeling topic. In addition to HR-XML, OASIS, OMG,
UN/CEFACT and XBRL.org, the Orlando meeting is expected to
attract representatives from ACORD, BASDA, Health Level Seven,
IDEAlliance, IFX, IMS Global Learning Consortium, Open Applications
Group and the NAPM XML Initiative. Other groups are welcome
and may register at http://www.omg.org/interop/.
"The opportunity to agree on cross-consortia models
benefits everyone," added Klaus-Dieter Naujok of IONA,
member of the UN/CEFACT Steering Group. "Participants
in the Interoperability Summit Series will learn and share
information about modeling tools, methodologies and approaches
to meta-data management. The Summit will give us all the opportunity
to disseminate information about our own models and modeling
goals and work proactively with other consortia representatives
to ensure capability across industries and business functions."
"XBRL.org is about bringing together the stakeholders in areas of
business
reporting and helping bridge interoperability of business data between
disparate systems and speed the flow of information to the capital
markets.
Supporting integration between other XML efforts and XBRL.org expertise
in
the accounting and investment fields can only help make this happen with
far greater impact," said Louis Matherne, co-chair of the XBRL.org
steering
committee.
About HR-XML
HR-XML (http://www.hr-xml.org)
is a global, independent, non-profit consortium dedicated
to enabling e-commerce and inter-company exchange of human
resources (HR) data worldwide. The work of the Consortium
centers on the development and promotion of standardized XML
vocabularies for HR. HR-XML's current efforts are focused
on standards for staffing and recruiting, compensation and
benefits, training and work force management. HR-XML is represented
by its membership in 17 countries.
About OASIS
OASIS (http://www.oasis-open.org)
is the international, not-for-profit consortium that advances
electronic business by promoting open, collaborative development
of interoperability specifications. With the United Nations,
OASIS sponsors ebXML, a global framework for electronic business
data exchange. OASIS operates XML.ORG, the non-commercial
portal that delivers information on the use of XML in industry.
The XML.ORG Registry provides an open community clearinghouse
for distributing and locating XML application schemas, vocabularies
and related documents. OASIS serves as the home for industry
groups interested in developing XML specifications. OASIS
technical work embraces conformance, security, business transactions,
repositories and other interoperability issues.
About OMG
With well-established standards covering software from design,
through development, to deployment and maintenance, the Object
Management Group (OMG) supports a full-lifecycle approach
to enterprise integration. Based on the established Object
Management Architecture (OMA) and emerging Model Driven Architecture
(MDA), OMG's standards cover application design and implementation.
OMG's Modeling standards include the UML (Unified Modeling
Language) and CWM (Common Warehouse Metamodel). CORBA, the
Common Object Request Broker Architecture, is OMG's standard
open platform. OMG also issues the CORBAservices and a rapidly-growing
set of industry-specific standards in vertical markets including
healthcare, telecommunications, biotechnology, transportation
and a dozen other areas. The OMG is headquartered in Needham,
MA, USA, with an office in Tokyo, Japan as well as international
marketing offices in the UK and Germany, along with a U.S.
government representative in Washington, DC.
About UN/CEFACT
UN/CEFACT (www.uncefact.org)
is the United Nations body whose mandate covers worldwide
policy and technical development in the area of trade facilitation
and electronic business. Headquartered in Geneva, it has developed
and promoted many tools for the facilitation of global business
processes including UN/EDIFACT, the international EDI standard.
Its current work programme includes such topics as Simpl-edi
and Object Oriented EDI and it strongly supports the development
and implementation of open, interoperable global standards
and specifications for electronic business.
About XBRL.org
XBRL.org (www.xbrl.org)
is an international group developing the eXtensible Business
Reporting Language (XBRL), an XML-based framework for the
preparation and exchange of business reports and data. The
initial goal of XBRL is to provide an XML-based framework
that the global business information supply chain will use
to create, exchange, and analyze financial reporting information
including, but not limited to, regulatory filings such as
annual and quarterly financial statements, general ledger
information, and audit schedules.
For more information:
Carol Geyer
Director of Communications
OASIS
carol.geyer@oasis-open.org
+1 978.667.5115 x209
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