ISO/IEC JTC 1                                                         

Information Technology                                                





ISO/IEC  JTC 1 N 5720                   



DATE:  1999-01-06     



REPLACES                                     



DOC TYPE:

Other document (Defined)                                              



TITLE:

Appointment of the Unicode Consortium as Registration Authority for   

ISO/IEC 10036:1995                                                    



SOURCE:

JTC 1/SC 34 Secretariat                                               



PROJECT:                   



STATUS:

This document is circulated to JTC 1 National Bodies for information  

and review at the January 1999 JTC 1 Plenary meeting in Rio.          



ACTION ID:  ACT 



DUE DATE:            



DISTRIBUTION:  P and L Members                                             

                                                                           





MEDIUM:   



DISKETTE NO.:            



NO. OF PAGES:  3         





Secretariat, ISO/IEC JTC 1, American National Standards Institute, 11 

West 42nd Street, New York, NY  10036; Telephone:  1 212 642 4932;    

Facsimile:  1 212 840 2298; Email:  lrajchel@ansi.org                 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

At the 9-13 November 1998 JTC 1/SC 34 Meeting, the following resolution was approved unanimously:

Resolution 3: Appointment of the Unicode Consortium as Registration Authority for ISO/IEC 10036:1995

JTC 1/SC 34 notes the proposal to transfer the Registration Authority responsibilities for ISO/IEC 10036:1995 from AFII to the Unicode Consortium contained in SC34 N012. The proposal is acceptable to SC 34 only if the Unicode Consortium agrees to be the Registration Authority for all items covered by the standard as indicated in the liaison statement SC34 N0026.

The SC 34 Secretariat is requested to forward the request to transfer the RA to JTC 1 for final approval upon confirmation that the revised proposal is acceptable to the Unicode Consortium.

The revised proposal has been accepted by the Unicode Consortium and I am forwarding SC 34 N 12 to JTC 1 for approval. It contains information about the Unicode Consortium and states their willingness to take over as Registration Authority for ISO/IEC 10036:1995. The present Registration Authority, AFII, will be closing down by 31 August 1999 and so the transfer should occur before then.

Let me know if you need any further information from me.

Marisa Topping
JTC 1/SC 34 Secretariat


ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC34 N0012

ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC34

Information Technology ---

Document Description and Processing Languages

TITLE: AFII Liaison Report
SOURCE: Asmus Freytag, AFII President
PROJECT:
PROJECT EDITOR:
STATUS: Liaison Statement
ACTION: For information; SC34 must also take action on the transfer of the 10036 RA
DATE: 2 November 1998
DISTRIBUTION: SC34 and Liaisons
REFER TO:
REPLY TO: Dr. James David Mason
(ISO/IEC JTC1/SC34 Chaiman)
Lockheed Martin Energy Systems
Information Management Services
1060 Commerce Park, M.S. 6480
Oak Ridge, TN 37831-6480 U.S.A.
Telephone: +1 423 574-6973
Facsimile: +1 423 574-0004
Network: masonjd@ornl.gov
http://www.ornl.gov/sgml/wg4/
ftp://ftp.ornl.gov/pub/sgml/wg4/

AFII Liaison Report

AFII has had two main projects: Registration of glyphs and Printing the next edition of ISO/IEC 10646-1.

With increasing cooperation between ISO/IEC JTC1/SC2 and The Unicode Consortium, we are expecting that printing the upcoming second edition of 10646 will be the last time we are engaging in this project.

All of our member companies are also members of The Unicode Consortium. We have therefore decided to discontinue AFII as a separate entity. The Unicode Consortium is interested in continuing the activities I mentioned above.

We would therefore like to formally notify JTC and the TMB that AFII intends to discontinue its activities as registration authority. We recommned that the Unicode Consortium be considered as the new registration authority under ISO/IEC 10036.

During my tenure, one (1) glyph was registered, for the Euro sign. No fee was charged for this registration, however, it is the intent of the RA that this was the last time the RA absorbed the cost of registrations. Some interest has been expressed by the user community to have glyphs registered for all the characters that are new to the second edition of 10646, however, no sponsor has been found.

With the intended transfer of the Registration Authority to the Unicode Consortium, AFII has deferred developing a revision of its fee structure so as to allow the new registration authority to reflect its true costs.

There have been several sales of the Glyph registry.

AFII will cease operations no later than the end of its fiscal year 99, August 31, 1999. We hope that transfer of registration authority can be completed by that time.

If you have any questions, please contact me.

Asmus Freytag

President

AFII

The AFII Report is accompanied by a letter to JTC1, indicating their desire to tranfer the Registration Authority for ISO/IEC 10036 to the Unicode Consortium:

From:	Asmus Freytag [SMTP:asmusf@ix.netcom.com]


Sent:	Saturday, October 31, 1998 6:24 PM


To:	Matthew Deane; 'afii@unicode.org'


Cc:	Lisa Rajchel


Subject:	Glyph Registration under ISO/IEC 10036


Matthew,

The Unicode Consortium has been approached by several of its members
who are also members of AFII with the request to continue the glyph 
registration work under ISO/IEC 10036 after AFII is dissolved. This 
year, the Unicode Board of directors approved this request.

The Unicode Consortium was founded in 1991 and its main purpose is to
develop, maintain and promote the use of a 16-bit universal character
set. From the beginning, Unicode has enjoyed close cooperation with
and later C liaison status to ISO/IEC JTC1/SC2, and more recently 
applied for C liaison status with ISO/IEC JTC1/SC22/WG20.

The Consortium has more than 50 companies and over 60 individuals as
members in altogether four categories of membership. The Unicode 
Standard is now going into its third edition.

The Consortium has enjoyed a stable source of funding form memberships
and would be able to guarantee the continuation of glyph registration
work, provided that cost-based fees are charged for registration 
requests. The technical expert who carried out the registration activity
for AFII has indicated his interest in continuing his work under 
contract with the Consortium, but many of our members could contribute
similar expertise, should this be needed.

Please let us know if you require any additional information.


A./

Asmus Freytag

Vice President

The Unicode Consortium