1. 2 the family tree cept (1959) ec green paper (1987) mou january 1988 etsi, march 88
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The family tree
CEPT (1959)EC Green Paper
(1987)
MoU January 1988
ETSI, March 88
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Who is who in Europe?
EU (25) Regulatory framework
CEPT (43) Frequency issues
ETSI (55) ICT Standards
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ETSI
Not-for-profit organization created in 1988 A recognized European standards organization Setting globally applicable standards for
telecommunications and ICT radiocommunications broadcasting
Direct participation More than 14,000 publications –
Freely available on the web
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ETSI today
Wireline, wireless, NGN, VoIP, QoS, Security, Satellite comms, Digital TV and radio, Interoperability testing, accessibility etc.
26 Technical bodies (125+ working groups)
2 Partnership Projects (22 working groups)
21M€ budget/contribution EC/EFTA 15%
Brand image: «one of the best in class »
A track record of industrial successes worldwide
3GPP & MESA
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ETSI: A Standardization Success Story
ETSI since its establishment in 1988 has established itself in a relatively short time as a premier multinational SDO
ETSI has flourished as deregulation took hold and as the European Community expanded, increasing the importance of standardized cross borders solutions
ETSI success is based on attracting new Members and developing high quality standards that
– enable interoperability – encourage innovation, open up new markets – create trust and confidence in products – bring down costs and increases competition – avoid duplication of effort
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Membership by Category (Jan. 2005)
Users5%
Administrations10%
Network Operators15%
Service Providers & Others19%
Manufacturers51%
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Fora /Consortia
Fora /Consortia
ETSI’s relations with ITU, IEC & ISO and other standards bodies
ITU-TITU-T ITU-RITU-R JTC1JTC1
GSC• IEEE • IPv6 Forum• GSM Association• DVB Project• EBU• Parlay • IMTC• WIMAX forum• TETRA MoU• ICANN• & 50+ others
Internationalbodies
InterregionalCo-operation
CENELECCENELECCEN
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Global Standards Collaboration
Interregional collaboration on selected standardization subjects between
ISACC (Canada)
T1 Committee (USA)
TIA (USA)
ITU(International)
TTC(Japan)
TTA(Korea)
ACIF(Australia)
ARIB(Japan)
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Standards are a key variable in leveling the playing field
Standards facilitate a multi-supplier environment thereby providing for
– competitive pricing of equipment– more robust and assured supply channels– innovation in order to differentiate product
and to retain customers
Standards enable the development of profitable industrial ecosystems
Increase the likelihood of interoperability in a multi-equipment provider and in a multi-service provider environment
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Standards and service creation
Standards facilitate a multi-service provider environment thereby providing for competitive pricing of services interchangeable end user terminal equipment
Standardized solutions
in the “lower and middle layers” enable the development
of value added services and applications
This is highly critical in regions where
local manufacturing industry cannot compete on a global scale (yet)
the service industry is highly creative and competitive there is a strong political push to rely on ICT and
education to develop.
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In case you think standardizers are idealists
Up to 80% of trade (4 trillion USD per annum)
is affected by standards or associated technical regulations. (OECD)
ICT sector is a 650billion USD per annum
global industry, the largest sector in the world, accounting for more than 2% of world GDP
and representing nearly 20% of world trade.
(lirne.net)
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“Standards allow different entities to create
technically compatible equipment and services.
It should be noted that ‘interoperability’ requires
more than ‘mere’ technical compatibility.
However, without standards neither compatibility
nor interoperability would be possible”.
About Interoperability and Standards
Report of the High Level Group on DRM, July 04
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INDEED, SOCIETY, USERS, WE
ARE NOT INTERESTED IN STANDARDS!
THE ONLY THING THAT COUNTS:
HOW TO MAKE BEST USE OF STANDARDS
TO BUILD SERVICES AND APPLICATIONS
THAT WILL BEST SERVE USERS’ AND
MARKET’S INTERESTS
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WE USERS WANT TO PLUG AND PLAY!
WE WANT, NEED, INSIST IN
INTEROPERABILITY!
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Fragmentation of standards making market and usage driven standardization (e.g. e-gov)
huge consequences on Interoperability
End to end monolithic standards are behind us
Complex value chains
Service platform approach
with multiple horizontal layers
Standard & non-standard
building blocks for platforms
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Therefore
The very meaning of interoperability evolves with stakeholders and markets’ needs:
From specifying end to end systems to a logic of building blocks
From standardizing interfaces a priori to addressing interoperability of components a posteriori
Very hot topic on ETSI’s strategic agenda
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Objectives of @METIS
Create a Europe/Latin America think
thank
on specifications and Interoperability
profiles
for e-government applicationsPoliciesTechnology strategies
Enable the development of joint
deliverables (strategic and/or technical)
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Objectives of the meeting
Get to know each other better
Explore common possible strategies and
projects
Highlight areas of common interest
Select (technical) topics for potential
ccoperation
Identify methods for cooperation
Start elaborating a roadmap
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Agenda-day 19:30 Why ETSI is the place to bridge EU and LA
initiatives on e-administration. Francisco Da Silva, Portugal Telecom, Chairman of the ETSI Board
10:00 The @LIS Dialogue on Standards and the @METIS project, what are we aiming at?
Margot Dor, Coordinator of the @LIS Dialogue on Standardization, ETSI
10:30 Coffee 11:00
Interoperability in standards and regulation: Chilean e-gov experience
Patricio Gutierrez, Coordinator e-Government, Ministerio Secretaría General de la Presidencia, Chile
11:30 Interoperability in the DNA of standards Anthony Wiles, ETSI PTCC 12:00
E-government interoperability in Brazil
Patricia Pessi, Director e-gov dept, Ministry of Planning, Budget and Management, Brazil
12:30 Lunch 14:30 Web open standards, a critical factor for e-
administration Daniel Dardailler, Head of W3C European branch
15:00
The agenda for Connectivity, Colombia
Hugo Sin DDG, Agenda de Conectividad, Colombia
15:30 e-GOIA, an e-Gov. @LIS demonstration project Petra Hoepner Fraunhofer Institute/FOKUS
16:00 Coffee 16:30
Creating value-added in models based on open source
Jean Pierre Laisne, President, ObjectWeb
17:00 The European Interoperability Framework Bernhard Schnittger, Head of Unit, IDA (DG Enterprise and Industry)
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Agenda-day 29:00 Europe/Latin America ICT cooperation policy Paulo Lopes, International
Relations, EC DG INFSO
9:30 IT and interoperability strategies for e-government policies in Mexico
Jose Manuel Diaz Martinez Unidad e-gov y politicas IT Secretaria Funcion Publica, Mexico
10:00 How free and open is free and open-about inferfaces and components
Herve Rannou, President ITEMS International
10:30 Who is “Cecill”? Luc Grateau, INRIA 11:00 Coffee 11:30 E-administration, the French experience Jean Bernard Gramunt,
Ministry of Industry, France 12:00
The CEN/ISSS e-gov Focus Group Peter Brown, Head of IT Directorate, EU Parliament, Chairman CEN/ISSS FG
12:30 The Chilean regulation for digital signature Raúl Arrieta, Advisor to the Minister, Subsecretaria de Telecomunicaciones, Chile
13:00 Lunch 14:30 Interoperability by all means: APIs based on
open standards Michel Genette, Member of the Board OSA/Parlay
15:00 The acid test: Testing Interoperability Patrick Guillemin, ETSI PlugtestsTM service
15:30 Coffee 16:00 The way forward: recap of opportunities for the
EU-LA cooperation on Interoperability Profiles Group discussion
16:30 How to get there: topics, methods & roadmap Karl Heinz Rosenbrock Margot Dor
17:00 Final remarks and closing of the meeting Karl Heinz Rosenbrock Francisco Da Silva
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Gracias, Obrigado, Thank you
Karl Heinz Rosenbrockrosenbrock@etsi.org
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