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- An Introduction to ISO 15926
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What is ISO 15926
- How Information Exchange is Supposed to Work
- How Information Exchange Actually Works
- How Information Exchange Works with ISO 15926
- How ISO 15926 Works
- A Bit of History
- Long Tail
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Areas of Current Work
- Norwegian Continental Shelf
- MIMOSA
- JORD
- iRING
- Development of Standards
- Educational Material
- Getting Started With ISO 15926
- Other ISO 15926 Resources
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Introduction to ''An Introduction to ISO 15926''
- ISO 15926 is Like a Babel Fish
- ISO 15926 is Like HTML
- ISO 15926 is Like English on Your Cell Phone
- About the Author
- ISO15926Primer_DiagnosticPage
Other Ideas for Getting Started
Contents
Use the Compliance Colors as a Roadmap
If you have read the previous section on How ISO 15926 Compliance Colors Work you will know that there are a number of steps and decisions to make when implementing ISO 15926. These form a sort of roadmap from no compliance to full compliance.
Figure 21 - ISO 15926 Roadmap
To get an idea of where to start, read the entire Compliance document. Here are some things to consider:
- Which templates and reference data content to use, from simple "dictionary level" naming to fully Part2-explicit-Part7 references to all content.
- Whether to use reference content that is standardized within one enterprise, within industry communities, or with standards bodies such as ISO.
- Which physical form to use to represent content at interfaces file exchanges to web-service API's, from XML schema to RDF-OWL representations.
- The amount of content to support, both "payload" and "management metadata".
References
Read the BIDG
When it is complete, the Business Interfaces Definition Guide (BIDG) aka Handover Guide will list many of the information transfer needs for project turnover, complete with RDS/WIP terminology. This will be good for comparison against any existing turnover practices. It is expected to be available sometime in 2010.