= IDS-ADI Infrastructure Status = The breadth and depth of ISO 15926 makes for considerable infrastructure requirements, ranging from special interest groups around engineering disciplines, to training provision and software services running on the Internet. This page itemizes these deliverables and provides each with a status report, responsible party and in some cases links to other on-line information. == SIGs == TBD == Training == TBD == RDS/WIP == Status: somewhat operational Next Release: manually operational, end of June 2008 Following Release: fully operational, no date set Lead: Julian Bourne '''Overview''' The [RdsWipProject RDS/WIP project] provides the software and Internet-accessible services for publishing both the standard and contributions to its associated reference data library. There are two exposed forms of this data: one is intended for machines, expressed in OWL/RDF and delivered via SPARQL; the other is intended for humans and is presented using HTML in a web browser. '''Report''' The existing deployment is only partially operational: it does not reach the necessary mark in aspects such as performance and standards conformance and is missing machine-driven mechanisms for submitting new contributions. Also, its internal structure is far too rigid and requires a great deal of coordination between different parties to effect change. The [RdsWipOnePlan next stage (RDS/WIP 1.0)] will be to move that solution to a more robust and faster technical framework, dropping the support for direct editing in the interim, but adding much more flexible support for incorporating bulk contributions, with some administrator intervention. The [RdsWipTwoPlan following stage (RDS/WIP 2.0)] will be to provide a completely automated path to incorporate bulk contributions and the administration features needed to manage that; along with recreating a direct editing feature for ISO 15926 data only. The main advantage of the revised platform, apart from performance and conformance, is that it will allow any RDF to be published, which leaves a great deal of flexibility in structure and representation - allowing the structures and representation to change quickly and without much need for coordination. It also provides a lower barrier to entry when starting a collaborative project to harmonize standards against one another. These features are inherent in the architecture and to the technology choices and will be available from the outset of RDS WIP 1.0.