This part of the standard defines a reference model that specifies common behaviors for SCSI devices and an abstract structure that is generic to all SCSI I/O system implementations.This standard defines generic requirements that pertain to SCSI implementation standards. It also defines implementation requirements. An implementation requirement specifies behavior in terms of measurable or observable parameters that apply to an implementation. Examples of implementation requirements defined in this standard are the status values to be returned upon command completion and the service responses to be returned upon task management function completion.Generic requirements are transformed to implementation requirements by an implementation standard. An example of a generic requirement is the hard reset behavior specified in 6.3.2.
This standard provides a consolidated vocabulary of eBusiness concepts as found and defined in ISO/IEC 14662 and the existing parts of ISO/IEC 15944, namely, Parts 1, 2, 4, 5, 6 and 7 along with their associated terms.This standard provides the rules, guidelines and procedures governing the formation of definitions for concepts relevant to eBusiness and choice of terms as a single, harmonized and integrated controlled vocabulary. This includes those governing multilingual expandability which incorporates and integrates cultural capability.As such, this standard facilitates the production of human interface equivalents (HIEs) of eBusiness terms and definitions in the various official (and de facto) languages of ISO members.This standard identifies the essential elements of an entry in this controlled vocabulary as well as their rules and specifications. It also includes rules for ensuring quality and integrity control requirement for each entry and the interworking among the entries while doing so in an IT-enabled manner. It also addresses maintenance and update procedures.This standard is built on ISO/IEC 14662 and the existing Parts 1, 2, 4, 5 and 6 of ISO/IEC 15944. The exclusions which apply to one or more of these International Standards apply to ISO/IEC 15944-7:2009This standard does not currently support the following requirements (in no particular order):1. the more detailed level of rules (and possible more detailed level of granularity) for the essential elements of 鬳Business vocabulary?entry, as currently specified in 5.3; 2. the more detailed level of rules for change management of the eBusiness vocabulary. It is most likely that these will be addressed in the second edition (and will be based on or harmonized with the rules in ISO/IEC 15944-2:2006, Clause 6.5 鬜egistration Status?; 3. the inclusion of added non-essential, i.e. conditional or optional, elements for a controlled vocabulary entry; 4. the addition of eBusiness concepts with their definitions and associated terms which are not found in ISO/IEC 14662 or any part of ISO/IEC 15944; 5. the ability to be able to fully support the set of external constraints of jurisdictional documents pertaining to individual accessibility requirements; 6. the provision of Human Interface Equivalents (HIEs) of jurisdictional domains which are administrative sub-divisions of a UN member state; 7. the identification of and rules for 鬾on-essential?or optional elements of an entry in the controlled vocabulary; 8. the incorporation of individual accessibility requirements, (e.g. as summarized in the UN Convention on the Rights of Disabled Persons); 9. the establishment of a Registration Authority; 10. the development of a 魌emplate?of the nature found in the other parts of ISO/IEC 15944. It is anticipated that some or all of these requirements will be addressed in future editions of this part of ISO/IEC 15944, in companion Standards, or in Technical Reports.This standard does not assume nor endorse any specific system environment, database management system, database design paradigm, system development methodology, data definition language, command language, system interface, user interface, syntax, computing platform, or any technology required for implementation , i.e. it is information technology neutral. At the same time, This standard maximizes an IT-enabled approach to its implementation and maximizes semantic interoperability.
This part of the standard describes a general model for time-stamping services producing linked tokens, describes the basic components used to construct a time-stamping service producing linked tokens, defines the data structures used to interact with a time-stamping service producing linked tokens, describes specific instances of time-stamping services producing linked tokens, and defines a protocol to be utilized by time-stamping services producing linked tokens for the purpose of extending linked tokens to published values.
Specifies descriptions of the main video coding tools in hardware description language (HDL) form. Such alternative descriptions to the ones that are reported in ISO/IEC 14496-2, ISO/IEC 14496-5 and ISO/IEC TR 14496-7 correspond to the need of providing the public with conformant standard descriptions that are closer to the starting point of the development of codec implementations than textual descriptions or pure software descriptions. ISO/IEC TR 14496-9:2009 contains conformant descriptions of video tools that have been validated within the recommendation ISO/IEC TR 14496-7.
ISO/IEC TR 15944-6:2009 discusses and describes the following three topics of eBusiness modelling: fundamentals of business transaction modelling that describe the conceptual aspects of eBusiness; principles of eBusiness modelling that specify the semantic aspect of business transactions and their components and relationships involved in the business transaction; classification scheme of Open-edi scenarios based on eBusiness modelling.
A privacy impact assessment (PIA) is an important financial services and banking management tool to be used within an organization, or by "contracted" third parties, to identify and mitigate privacy issues and risks associated with processing consumer data using automated, networked information systems. This standard describes the privacy impact assessment activity in general; defines the common and required components of a privacy impact assessment, regardless of business systems affecting financial institutions; and provides informative guidance to educate the reader on privacy impact assessments. A privacy compliance audit differs from a privacy impact assessment in that the compliance audit determines an institution's current level of compliance with the law and identifies steps to avoid future non-compliance with the law. While there are similarities between privacy impact assessments and privacy compliance audits in that they use some of the same skills and that they are tools used to avoid breaches of privacy, the primary concern of a compliance audit is simply to meet the requirements of the law, whereas a privacy impact assessment is intended to investigate further in order to identify ways to safeguard privacy optimally
ISO/IEC TR 14496-9:2009 specifies descriptions of the main video coding tools in hardware description language (HDL) form. Such alternative descriptions to the ones that are reported in ISO/IEC 14496-2, ISO/IEC 14496-5 and ISO/IEC TR 14496-7 correspond to the need of providing the public with conformant standard descriptions that are closer to the starting point of the development of codec implementations than textual descriptions or pure software descriptions. ISO/IEC TR 14496-9:2009 contains conformant descriptions of video tools that have been validated within the recommendation ISO/IEC TR 14496-7.