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Member Newsletter
September 2004
Welcome to a new edition of The Open Group Member Newsletter!
We hope it will be a valuable resource for our members, and
a tool as useful as The Open Group website.
Please let us know if there is anything you would like to
see in this newsletter, or on our website, by e-mailing
us. We look forward to hearing your feedback.
In This Issue:
CEO Corner with Allen Brown
If you have been to one of the quarterly conferences of The
Open Group recently you may have heard me quote Peter Drucker
on the need to focus on the “I” of IT. To paraphrase
Drucker, he compares the Information Revolution to similar
events in history and claims that no real changes took place
for the first 50 years in each case. In the case of the revolution
brought about by the printing press, all that happened was
that 10,000 monks were no longer required to write the text
for books. However, it was not until around 50 years after
the invention of the printing press that any real impact was
made on the lives of people - generally as a result of the
bulk printing of the Lutheran Bible and making it available
at very low cost. At the time of the industrial revolution,
it was not until 50 years had passed that anything other than
simple mechanization of manual processes came about. When
it did, through the railroads, it enabled many people to travel
great distances on frequent occasions and brought significant
change to daily life.
Drucker concludes that it is now over 50 years since the information
revolution began and that all we have done is to automate
manual tasks: it has not yet made a fundamental change in
the way decisions are made in organizations. We have so far
focused on the “T” in IT. It is now time to focus
on the “I”.
The importance of focusing on the “I” is starting
to get attention. In the article, “Information Quality:
Your Decisions Are Only as Good as Your Information”,
submitted to this newsletter by Chris Harding, he continues
the dialogue started at the Brussels conference on information
quality. In fact, he will continue to lead the discussion
at our October New Orleans conference in a session on Tuesday
afternoon of the Holistic Information Management Task Force,
which is open to all attendees of the conference.
At the conference in Boston in July, the Information Quality
workshop identified three key areas for standardization:
- Metadata to facilitate information retrieval, to provide
a trust context for information, and to enable information
re-use;
- Application interfaces to support information tagging;
and
- Metrics for information retrieval and other information
operations.
In New Orleans, the Holistic Information Management Task
Force meeting will:
- Review existing technology and standards;
- Identify gaps; and
- Agree on a charter for The Open Group work on holistic
information management.
I am sure that Chris and the other folk leading this activity
would like to see you there.
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The Open Group Calls for Greater Interoperability on ComputerWeekly.com
ComputerWeekly.com recently published an article by The Open
Group’s Vice President of Marketing, Graham Bird, ‘Business
Needs Open Standards for Applications.’ In the article,
Bird asserts that suppliers must provide greater interoperability.
He states, “There are very few open standards that enable
interoperability - and hence free flow of information- between
business applications.”
Bird points out that a good deal has been done for open-systems
platforms and some middleware, to alleviate the problems of
the lack of common standards, but there is virtually nothing
out there for an organization that needs access to integrated
information when it is required, in the form it is required,
on the device of choice. He says that The Open Group has issued
a ‘Declaration of Independence’ to address this
lack of interoperable standards.
The Declaration is intended to show companies in the IT supply
industry that there is a great deal of support for the development
and use of open standards across the industry. Bird argues
that proprietary systems are wrong for businesses that are
evolving, reaching new customers, making new contacts and
expanding their infrastructures. “They do not meet today’s
challenges. Businesses need to change their processes to meet
business needs, and information systems must change and evolve
in step with these changes.”
Businesses need information to flow in a secure, reliable
and timely manner, so that that they are able to extract and
integrate data stored in the past - when there was little
or no knowledge of how it might be used in the future. The
only way to do that cost-effectively, Bird reasons, is for
systems to be easier to integrate. The only way to do that
is to use open standards.
The smart software vendors are now providing integration points
for their systems and applications to make it easier for information
systems to respond and evolve to meet changing business needs.
They are active in delivering systems built on open standards
- the best have certified products. But, Bird states, “Too
many suppliers still cling to proprietary systems in the mistaken
belief that it is the best way to retain customers.”
In conclusion, Bird remarks that “IT is one of the few
remaining industries to believe that differentiation on price
or on proprietary solutions is the only way to compete.
As the buyer, the choice is yours, and IT suppliers will only
change their behaviour when you demand that they do so.”
One sure way to make these demands heard? Redirect your money
to products, services and suppliers that demonstrate that
they support open standards. Preferably certified open systems.
Read the article: http://www.opengroup.org/comm/press/articles/Business%20needs%20open%20standards.pdf
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Conference Preview: Boundaryless Information Flow™: Securing the Extended
Enterprise
The Open Group’s autumn conference, Boundaryless Information
Flow™: Securing the Extended Enterprise, is taking place
on October 18-21, 2004 at the Hotel Monteleone in New Orleans,
LA, USA.
Distributed Denial of Service (DDOS) attacks pose a debilitating
threat to enterprise networks and the flow of information
throughout the boundaryless organization. In 2000, DDOS attacks
took three to four days to replicate across the Internet,
but in 2003 the Slammer worm took just eight minutes. The
actions of attackers - spreading viruses, stealing information
and identity, undermining privacy, spoiling web sites, proving
they can break security measures - need constant responses;
it's a continual catch-up. The threat to the enterprise is
real, is all-pervasive, and is now automated.
In response, to focus on what is most important – safeguarding
information, and making IT systems as fail-safe, dependable
and reliable as possible - is critical.
This conference will bring together the foremost IT security
and other experts to detail the current security threats,
discuss the issues for enterprise communications, and outline
practical solutions.
Confirmed Speakers include:
- Dr. Bill Hancock, CISSP, CISM, Vice President of Security
Practice & Strategy and Chief Security Officer, Savvis
Communications
- Bob Blakley, Chief Scientist, Security and Privacy, IBM
- Mark O’Neill, Chief Technology Officer, Vordel
- Mark Reichert, Chief Technology Officer, Schools Interoperability
Framework
- Ben Calloni, Research Program Manager, Lockheed Martin
Aeronautics Company, Chair RTES Forum
- Mick Coady, VP Security Practice, Computer Associates
Int.
For more information and to register, please visit http://www.opengroup.org/new-orleans2004
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Conference Preview: Architecture Practitioners’ Conference - Enterprise
Architecture: Making IT Pay
The 3rd Architecture Practitioners' Conference is taking place
on October 19-21, 2004 at the Hotel Monteleone in New Orleans,
LA (concurrent with The Open Group’s Securing the Extended
Enterprise conference).
Enterprise architecture is becoming an essential function
in most organizations, providing strategic context for the
evolution of information technology within the enterprise,
in response to the changing needs of the business environment.
It also enables organizations to maintain the right balance
between permitting innovation and catering to the integration
needs of the extended enterprise. In this event, The Open
Group provides a forum for all key constituencies and stakeholders
to come together and explore new ways to solve problems, share
best practices, and network with peers.
This two-day conference will focus on how enterprise architecture
can best contribute to creating real business value, provide
experience-based insight into the approaches and methods that
have proved most effective for developing enterprise architectures
around the world, and clarify the limitations that exist in
this emerging field.
The conference will take a highly practical, hands-on approach,
combining presentations and discussions on best practices
with interactive workshops, case study reviews and demonstrations
of the latest tools.
At the conference, you will:
- Participate in highly practical workshops teaching best
practices in the enterprise architecture process
- Review in-depth case studies from organizations that
put theory into practice, learning what works and what doesn't
- Experience demonstrations and presentations on leading
tools supporting open methods for enterprise architecture
- Network with leading architecture experts, vendors, and
peers in the enterprise architecture field
For the full agenda: http://www.opengroup.org/architecture/0410norl/apc-agenda.htm
To register for the event, please visit http://www.opengroup.org/architecture/0410norl/q404arch-prac.htm
Top of Page
Information Quality: Your Decisions Are Only as Good as Your Information
By Dr. Chris Harding, The Open Group
Mistakes happen, but some have larger impact than others.
Mary in accounting sometimes sends out a wrong invoice. A
mistake. Jane in the emergency unit gives the wrong medicine
to an allergic patient. That’s due to a mistake too.
In 1999, three Chinese journalists were killed in the NATO
bombing of the Chinese embassy in Belgrade. Also due to a
mistake. Mary’s mistake can easily be corrected with
a short phone call and a new invoice, even though if repeated,
it impacts efficiency and possibly her company’s reputation.
The wrong medicine and bombing mistakes are a different story:
lives were lost, and in Belgrade, there was also serious political
damage – the bombing was considered one of the worst
political setbacks of the Kosovo conflict.
All three mistakes happened due to the lack of quality information
or a problem in the information flow. According to management
guru Peter Drucker, there is nothing more treacherous than
a manager’s attempt to make precise decisions on the
basis of coarse and incomplete information. The Japanese quality
guru, Kaoru Ishikawa, said to ‘speak with data’
- but the data have to be accurate. The cost of poor quality
information today is enormous. Yet in today’s highly
competitive environment, companies cannot afford to make the
wrong decision or lose efficiency due to the poor quality
of information they use. With the overwhelming amount of data
available today, managing information, ensuring its quality,
navigating it and making sense of it is becoming a huge issue
for enterprises of all kinds.
Although techniques for managing quality of goods, services
and processes are now quite sophisticated, information quality
management is still lagging. Ways of dealing with information
quality have been suggested and tried. They include both academic
theories and practical rules of thumb applied by outside consultants
to their clients’ problems for a fee. Some methods focused
specifically on dealing with dirty data, from techniques for
data cleaning and records matching, to more complex toolkits
such as data reconciliation frameworks and complex data cleaning
workflows. Other techniques, although they acknowledged the
importance of clean data, mainly emphasized the need to focus
on business management perspective, and to improve processes.
For example, some business consulting methodologies use principles
of Total Quality Management (TQM) applied to managing data
warehousing information quality; other approaches to process
management that impact information quality include Six Sigma,
and Quality Function Deployment (QFD). Yet another approach
is based on cooperative information systems (CIS).
However, one key issue is that there is no agreed way to measure
information quality. Appropriate metrics would help user organizations
improve their information quality. But there is not even an
agreement on different categories for the metrics. This has
been a problem for a number of years, yet there is still no
solution in sight. Although it's easy to measure physical
characteristics like size, weight or quantity, measuring highly
abstract characteristics like information quality is much
more of a challenge. A number of researchers identified different
characteristics such as accuracy, precision, currency, output
timeliness, reliability, completeness, conciseness, format,
understandability, report usefulness, sufficiency, freedom
from bias, relevance and others. However, there is no agreement
on a definitive set. To make the issue more complex, add the
need to account for potential differences between objective
high quality data and subjective lack of confidence in the
data by users, or the need to account for potential differences
between subjective assessments by stakeholders/users versus
custodians/IT departments. Most metrics today are developed
by companies on an ad hoc basis to solve specific problems.
That takes money and people.
But the problem is not just to find a metric. It is to find
a -standard- metric that everyone will use and that will enable
results in different organizations to be compared directly.
How to go about finding a standard metric? Development of
a standard metric (or set of metrics) can only be done by
a body that:
- can develop an understanding of the requirements;
- can combine the inputs from customers, vendors, and the
academic community;
- has the authority to speak for the industry.
Members of The Open Group, a vendor-neutral and technology-neutral
consortium with a long track record of contributing to IT
standards, have recognized the importance of access to integrated
quality information and made information central to its vision
and mission. Its vision focuses on driving the creation of
Boundaryless Information Flow™, to enable access to
integrated information within and between enterprises based
on open standards and global interoperability. The Open Group
realizes the importance of developing a standard way of measuring
information quality and has started looking into the problem,
calling on its members to assist with developing a standard
way to measure information quality.
It will not be easy or quick, to find the right solution –
this is a very complex issue. But there is a consensus in
the industry that a new approach is needed and would bring
significant efficiencies and cost-savings. Making information
and data quality a priority will ensure that investments of
time and money already put in will pay off, and mistakes from
decisions based on erroneous information will be minimized
- from setting the right price for an airline seat to a life
saved in an emergency room.
For more information, please contact Dr.
Chris Harding
Top of Page
The Open Group Announces LSB 2.0 Certification Program
The Open Group announced a certification program for the latest
LSB 2.0 Specification that was developed by The Free Standards
Group. The Open Group serves as the Certification Authority.
Read more: http://www.opengroup.org/press/14sep04.htm
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Sneak Peek: Boundaryless Information Flow™: Architecting
the Identity Management
The January 24-28, 2005 conference occurring in San Francisco,
CA, USA, will spotlight the progress made on enabling interoperable
identity management solutions, and introduce key concepts
of architecting identity management including trust, identity
management and authentication; provisioning; permissions management
and authorization; and directories and their roles. It will
discuss the business value of identity management, the most
effective measures for cost/benefit assessment, limiting legal
liability, and how to make informed decisions.
Highlights:
- Why should you invest in identity management?
- What is identity in IT terms?
- Can you trust electronic identity?
- Can effective identity management reduce your company’s
legal liability?
- How can you control the risk and secure your intellectual
property?
- How can you best architect an identity management framework?
- What are the business requirements for identity, authentication
and assurance?
- What is the status of standards for identity management?
Read more: http://www.opengroup.org/san-francisco2005/
Top of Page
The Open Group’s Mike Lambert will speak at the INBOX
Event
Mike Lambert, Fellow of The Open Group and Executive Director
of The Open Group Messaging Forum, will be speaking at INBOX
East - The Email Event, which takes place on November 17-19,
2004 in Atlanta, Georgia. Catch his session "Practical
Lessons in Regulatory Compliance" on day one of the conference.
INBOX covers the latest in spam, phishing, storage, compliance,
marketing, real time collaboration and the business and strategy
of messaging systems in 30 conference sessions, 4 keynotes
and plenaries, 5 symposiums, in-depth workshops and the exhibit
hall.
Sign up today and use discount code: OGE04 to save $100 off
your conference registration. http://www.inboxevent.com
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Certification News
TOGAF Certification News
We are pleased to announce that the number of architects certified
to the TOGAF 8 Certified Product Standard has now exceeded
100.
The current numbers of certified individuals, products and
services are as follows:
TOGAF 8 Certified Product Standard - 101 registered individuals
TOGAF 8 Training Product Standard - 2 products from 2 companies
TOGAF 8 Professional Services Product Standard - 3 products
from 3 companies
TOGAF 8 Tool Support Product Standard - 2 products from 2
companies
TOGAF 7 Certified Product Standard - 28 registered individuals
TOGAF 7 Training Product Standard - 2 products from 2 companies
TOGAF 7 Professional Services Product Standard - 7 products
from 7 companies
TOGAF 7 Tool Support Product Standard - 2 products from 2
companies
The full register is online at http://www.opengroup.org/togaf/cert/register.html
LSB Certification News
The Open Group is pleased to announce that Sun Microsystems
has registered Sun Java Desktop System(JDS) 2 as conforming
to the LSB Runtime Environment for IA32 Version 1.3 product
standard.
To see the Conformance Statement please refer to the latest
official list of LSB registered products at http://www.opengroup.org/lsb/cert/register.html
and click on the CSQ icon for the product.
For more information on the Free Standards Group Certification
program, please refer to http://www.freestandards.org/certification/
WAP 2.0 Certification News
The Open Group is pleased to announce the certification of
the Siemens C66 Version 01 as conforming to the WAP 2.0 product
specification.
To view the WAP Certified register, please refer to: http://www.opengroup.org/wap/cert/register_wap2.html
Top of Page
Press Roundup
The Open Group in the news
September 14, 2004 - The Open Group and FSG announce LSB 2.0
certification
September 14, 2004 - The Free Standards Group and The Open
Group Join Forces to Certify Applications to the Linux Standards
Base 2.0
August 31, 2004 - ebizQ: Does Your Company Know What It Knows?
August 31, 2004 - Avionics Magazine: Keeping Secrets in Integrated
Avionics
August 27, 2004 - ComputerWeekly: Business needs open standards
for applications
August 26, 2004 - CNBC: Green Hills Software Achieves Record
Revenue and Earnings in Second Quarter
August 15, 2004 - SD Times: Judge Puts Brakes on SCO v. DaimlerChrysler
August 12, 2004 - FinanceCanada.com: Tumbleweed Adopts Sender
ID Framework to Authenticate Email Senders; Underscores Tumbleweed's
Commitment to Adopt Email Sender Authentication Technologies
to Fight Email Fraud
August 10, 2004 - SearchEnterpriseLinix.com: Open declaration
gathers heavy support
Press Releases
8/9/04 - Interoperability at the Forefront of Executives’
Minds
http://www.opengroup.org/press/09aug04.htm
9/14/04 - The Free Standards Group and The Open Group Join
Forces to Certify Applications to the LINUX Standard Base
2.0
http://www.opengroup.org/press/14sep04.htm
Top of Page
Top Downloads from the Web
Top 10 publications downloads in August
2004
The Single UNIX Specification, Version 3
TOGAF, Version 8 'Enterprise Edition'
Distributed TP: The XA Specification
The Single UNIX Specification, Version 3 (Superseded version)
X/Open Single Sign-On Service (XSSO) - Pluggable Authentication
DCE 1.1: Remote Procedure Call
Security Design Patterns
Identity Management
Single UNIX Specification, Version 2 - 6 Vol Set for UNIX
98 Hardcopy
Common Security: CDSA and CSSM, Version 2 (with corrigenda)
Top 10 page views in August 2004
The Open Group home
Open Motif home
The Base Specifications, Issue 6
The Single UNIX Specification, Issue 2
CDE home
A-Z Index
Open Motif Downloads
Testing Downloads
Contacts
Top of Page
TOGAF 8 welcome pageTOGAF Open Training Sessions
Need to get TOGAF certified? Check out TOGAF Training sessions
offered by The Open Group members: TOGAF 8 Awareness or TOGAF
8 for Practitioners, which leads to TOGAF 8 Certification
by The Open Group.
For more information, check out: http://www.opengroup.org/events/#TOGAF
Top of Page
Industry Events Calendar
Events of The Open Group
Boundaryless Information Flow™: Securing the Extended
Enterprise
October 18-22, 2004
New Orleans, USA
http://www.opengroup.org/new-orleans2004/
3rd Architecture Practitioners’
Conference
October 19-21, 2004
New Orleans, USA
http://www.opengroup.org/architecture/0410norl/q404arch-prac.htm
Boundaryless Information Flow™:
Architecting Identity Management
January 24-28, 2005
San Francisco, USA
http://www.opengroup.org/events/q105/
Enterprise ArchITecture Europe 2005
April 25-29, 2005
Dublin, Ireland
http://www.opengroup.org/events
Enterprise ArchITecture 2005
July 18-22, 2005
New York, USA
http://www.opengroup.org/events
Open Source and Standards Summit
October 17-21, 2005
Brussels, Belgium
http://www.opengroup.org/events
Other Industry Events
ICCC/ISSE Conference - 2004
New Perspectives in IT Security & IT Business Value: the
Common Criteria Contribution
September 28-30, 2004
Berlin, Germany
http://www.iccconference.com/
Note: Members of The Open Group pay
the same rate as EEMA members. The Open Group's Messaging
Forum will meet on Monday September 27th in association with
this conference.
ESS 2004
The UK's Embedded Systems Show National Exhibition Centre
October 13-14, 2004
Birmingham, UK
http://www.edaexhibitions.com/ess/
2004 IAAC Symposium - "Delivering
Information Assurance"
Hosted by Ernst & Young
October 14, 2004
London, England
http://www.iaac.org.uk/Events/symp2004.htm
HealthMart 2004
Presented by Massachusetts Health Data Consortium
October 29, 2004
Boston, MA
http://www.mahealthdata.org
MDA-TOGAF ADM Workshop
Co-located with the OMG Technical Meeting
November 4, 2004
Washington, DC
http://www.omg.org/news/schedule/
INBOX East 2004 - The Email Event
November 17-19, 2004
Atlanta, GA
http://www.inboxevent.com
Note: The Open Group’s Mike
Lambert will present ‘Practical Lessons in Regulatory
Compliance’. Save $100 off with a discount code OGE04
Top of Page
Final Thoughts…
Please let us know if there are other subjects you would like
to see covered in this newsletter, if you have any comments
on any story or article in the newsletter, or to send letters
to the editor for possible publication in the future. You
can contact us at memnews-feedback@opengroup.org.
We look forward to hearing from you, and will see you next
month.
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