Path: utzoo!mnetor!tmsoft!torsqnt!news-server.csri.toronto.edu!cs.utexas.edu!jsq From: domo@tsa.co.uk (Dominic Dunlop) Newsgroups: comp.std.unix Subject: Re: IEEE TCOS, New Orleans, January 1991: EurOpen IR's report Message-ID: <17831@cs.utexas.edu> Date: 8 Feb 91 10:37:39 GMT Sender: jsq@cs.utexas.edu Lines: 33 Approved: jsq@cs.utexas.edu (Moderator, John S. Quarterman) Subject-References: <17630@cs.utexas.edu> X-Submissions: std-unix@uunet.uu.net Submitted-by: domo@tsa.co.uk (Dominic Dunlop) Mary Lynne Nielsen, IEEE Project Editor, makes the following corrections: > Whenever a possible new POSIX-related > standards activity is identified, its promoters can draw up > a Project Authorization Request (PAR), and submit it to the > Sponsor Executive Committee (SEC) of TCOS. If approved > (sponsored in IEEE terminology), and subsequently rubber- > stamped by the IEEE Computer Society's Standards Activities > Board (SAB), a new project is created. > ... > - Balloting groups are drawn from the membership of a > balloting pool. The pool has three types of member: > individual members of the IEEE who have specifically > applied to join the pool; institutional > representatives (IRs) accepted by the IEEE-CS SAB; > and national heads of delegation to the ISO > POSIX working group. The CS SAB has no official right to approve PARs, but approves to send them on to the IEEE Standards Board. It is the IEEE Standards Board, which oversees the standards activities of all 40-odd societies in the IEEE, which grants actual approval. Also, the IEEE Standards Board is the organization that officially approves IR membership status, not the CS SAB. -- Dominic Dunlop Volume-Number: Volume 22, Number 117