Transcript 33 - Docbox
Standards & Interoperability,
Transverse issues in ICT ETPs
ETSI, 23-24 October 2006
Cutting edge standards
and interoperability schemes
Dr. Walter Weigel
Director General
ETSI
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ETSI in a nutshell
ICT standards organization, private not for profit
Global membership (670+ Members, 80% industry, 20%
overseas)
Direct membership
Track record of worldwide industrial successes (fixed,
mobile, broadcast…)
Global network of partnerships
International/interregional
Founding partner and home of the 3GPP
Focus on interoperability (test specs, test suites, interop
testing)
Deliverables available free of charge
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The dynamics of ICT markets (1)
Fragmentation of standards making market
End to end monolithic standards are “last millenium”
ICT increasingly software intensive
Priority: develop systems, components, products FAST
Interoperability (interfaces) ex post
Applications drive the show
« Shopping » for standards
Interoperability comes next (or not at all)
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The dynamics of ICT markets (2)
Stakes moving up towards middleware
Infrastructure converging (e.g. IMS)
Point of gravity of convergence IT/telco/broadcast/CE
is in middleware - e.g. Mobile TV , home networking
Convergence: not smooth, rather plate tectonics
A global standards production market
China, India…next?
Barriers to Trade reducing how to ensure standards
do not replace them?
Standards & IP strategies of the new entrants on the
standards making market shape ICT markets
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Innovation Standards
market creation-and market access
Standardization to mutualise R&D costs
Enable interoperability
Reduce implementation risks and costs
Enable the development of an industrial ecosystem
around a technology
Enable a multi suppliers and multi service provider
environment
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Timing is key
Innovators
“Enthusiasts”
Early
Adopters
chasm
Standard
launch
window
Early Majority
Late Majority
Laggards
“Conservatives “Skeptics”
”
Time of diffusion of disruptive/discontinuous innovations
“Visionaries”
“Pragmatists”
Adapted from: Moore, Geoffrey A.: Crossing the Chasm; HarperCollins, 1999.
Timing for standards development moving earlier
in the process
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A network of partnerships is key
International
ITU-T
Inter
regional
Europe
Partnerships
ITU-R ITU-D
JTC1
GTSC
GRSC
EC
CEPT
CEN/
CLC
• CCSA
• OMA
• IEEE
• WIMAX forum
• IPv6 Forum
• GCF
• The Parlay
Group
• NENA
• CITEL
• GSM LA
• AHCIET
• CPqD
• Satlabs
• TETRA MoU
• (70+ active)7
Infra, radio, MW, services & applis…
Interoperability is not layer specific
Applications
E-Health, e-Gov, Defense
XML – Enterprise Format and Metadata
Copyright Items International - 2005
Web Services
Middleware
IP
Fixed
Radiocom
Mobile
Radio TV
Satellite
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How we see it
It’s about
architecture…
- In a fragmented standards making market an agreed
architecture is key to achieve interoperability.
- Effective cooperation with other SDOs and forums
« Architects of a standards world »
…about
interop schemes…
ETSI focus on technical interoperability (inter-working)
Development of an interoperability “service line”
- Ex-ante specs: requirements, architecture, protocols
- Ex-post specs: conformance tests, IOP tests
…and about
dosage
- Need for standards/interoperability
when heterogeneous
systems are converging (e.g Telco/broadcast/IT/CE)
- Market differentiation SDOs shouldn’t over specify
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How we do it
MTS (Methods for Testing and Specification)
• Methodologies, techniques and languages-e.g. TTCN3
Protocol and Testing Competence Centre
• Development of test specifications-conformance and
interop
Plugtests™ Service
• Validation of standards and prototypes through interop
testing events
More in today’s Panel 3
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Wherever one is in the value chain…
“We must clearly understand the fundamental law of
standards development which is that standards are
never neutral…
They reflect the strengths and innovations of those
who offer them to the committees…
Not participating in standards abdicates the
decision-making to the competition, whether it be by
company or nation”.
William J. Hudson, President Amp Inc. World Standards Day, 1995
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« Our innovation performance is crucially
dependent on strengthening investment
and the use of new technologies, particularly ICTs,
by both the private and public sectors.
Taking the lead internationally in the field of R&D
and innovation creates a first-mover advantage
which can be long-lasting, all the more so as
technological breakthroughs enable Europe to set
international standards ».
President Barroso
Communication to the Spring EU Council, 2.2.2005
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Thank You for Your Attention
[email protected]
++33(0)4 92 94 42 12
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