OASIS Emergency Management TC

Expand all | Collapse all

HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

Sukumar Dwarkanath

Sukumar Dwarkanath09-27-2007 16:43

Lee Tincher

Lee Tincher09-28-2007 02:01

  • 1.  HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-27-2007 16:43
    
    
    
    
    


  • 2.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 02:01
    
    
    
    
    


  • 3.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 02:49
     
    
    
    
    
    
    Hi Lee,
     
    I don't want to look as though I am coming from another planet.  I understand your concerns and appreciate your comments.  I am also totally open to considering alternative approaches.
     
    The only question I have is, don't you think that an OASIS standard should be written in accordance with the OASIS rules, including its requirements on normative language and conformance language?
     
    Mary McRae's email indicated that the XML schema provided as a separate schema file must be normative, and that any part of it included in the main document must be regarded and marked as informative.  My interpretation is that this should also apply, as much as possible, to any equivalent provisions in whatever language they are expressed--XML Schema, plain English, or dictionary entries.
     
    I may be wrong, and would like to hear OASIS's opinion on this.  I do believe that it is extremely important for a standard to avoid all the risks inherent in redundant normative statements or insufficient normative statements.  If there is an issue of clarity in a standard (e.g., a technical provision that may be difficult to understand), that issue can be easily addressed (and should be addressed) by providing good descriptive text, summaries, synopses, figures, or other such informative material, accompanied by explicit references to the authoritative location in the same document (or in another document, which may be a schema document) containing the corresponding normative statement.
     
    That said, I am not asking for any action that may cause a delay in the publication of EDXL-HAVE or any of our standards, as I understand that there are important user communities waiting for them.  I will be happy with any resolution of my comments the TC will want to adopt.  Still, I am very interested in making sure that we eventually produce very good standards, free of redundance, ambiguity, and insufficient specification.
     
    Alessandro
     
     


    From: Lee Tincher [mailto:ltincher@evotecinc.com]
    Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 22:00
    To: 'Dwarkanath, Sukumar'; emergency@lists.oasis-open.org
    Subject: RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Well – I’ve been debating this response for hours….looks like we should go with the short-term solution as described – but I feel it is necessary to point out that if we were to begin using a standardized data dictionary in the future this would not be a problem.  NIEM is based on the Dublin-Core metadata descriptions (which specify normative definitions) and it has a well defined set of Naming and Design Rules (NDR).   Why do we need to continually re-invent the wheel?  The definitions described below do not meet accepted metadata definitions (again Dublin-Core) and we are running the risk of looking disjointed between our own EDXL standards.  Lets adopt a over-arching data dictionary for all of our future efforts and put the “normative/non-normative” arguments to rest.

    Thanks,

    Lee

    'We the unwilling, led by the unknowing have been doing the difficult with little for so long that we are now ready to tackle the impossible with nothing.' -- Local Fire communications reserve volunteer motto


    From: Dwarkanath, Sukumar [mailto:Sukumar_Dwarkanath@sra.com]
    Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 12:43 PM
    To: emergency@lists.oasis-open.org
    Subject: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    All,

    We reviewed all of Alessandro’s comments (it was a grueling 3.5 hr session), and many comments could be attributed to an underlying theme - lack of information in the data dictionary that explicitly identified the normative parts. As a resolution, many of the comments can be addressed by the following items:

    -         Separating the comments row into two rows: Constraints (which will include normative language) and Comments (non-normative), and

    -         Including a few sentences at the beginning of the data dictionary that identifies that the data dictionary is non-normative, except for the following: ‘Element’, ‘Usage’ and the new ‘Constraints’ row. The schema would be identified as normative, which I think was an implicit understanding.  

    So, my suggestion is to include the above given that:

    -         it is directly relevant to compliance

    -         it would not take too much effort to create the above pieces since, following the new compliance requirements from OASIS, I had earlier identified the normative pieces in the HAVE specification. If we decide on Tuesday, I can have an updated version by the end of the week.

    -         it addresses most comments

    I wanted to run it by the TC to get view and thoughts from others

    Most of the other comments are editorial and can be incorporated quite easily. It definitely provides clarity. I feel a few of them should be deferred to the next release. I will post the document with the suggested disposition soon.

    Thanks

    Sukumar

    ------------------------------------------------------

    Sukumar Dwarkanath

    Touchstone

    SRA International

    1920 N Street NW

     

    sukumar.dwarkanath@touchstone.com

    202-449-7761 (direct)

    703-629-4074 (mobile)

    202-338-6106 (fax)

     

     

     

     

    This electronic message transmission contains information from SRA International, Inc., which may be confidential, privileged or proprietary. The information is intended for the use of the individual or entity named above. If you are not the intended recipient, be aware that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or use of the contents of this information is strictly prohibited. If you have received this electronic information in error, please notify SRA immediately by telephone at 866-584-2143.



  • 4.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 08:37
    
    
    
    
    


  • 5.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 15:18
     
    
    > 


  • 6.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 12:56
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    

    I’m afraid that you’ve read much more into my note than was intended.

    Here the language from the TC Process:

    All schema and XML instances, whether by inclusion or by reference, including fragments of such, must be well formed. All expressions must be valid. Each schema and XML instance that is part of the specification must be delivered in its own separate plain text file.

    The intent is that oftentimes errors occur when cutting/pasting schemas into a document – characters may be transposed to other symbols, bits lost, etc. It’s also extremely difficult for an end user to set up their environment if they have to cut/paste the schema out of a word processing document or worse, a PDF. So the thing that is actually parsable  is the normative version, if there is one. Note that the DITA TC produces its specification in both DTD and XSD formats – the DTD version is explicitly declared as normative. The TC can always decide that a schema isn’t normative, but they can’t decide that the version of the schema printed in the document is normative and the separate text file is informational only.

    Regards,

    Mary

    From: Alessandro Triglia [mailto:sandro@oss.com]
    Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 10:47 PM
    To: 'Lee Tincher'
    Cc: 'Dwarkanath, Sukumar'; emergency@lists.oasis-open.org
    Subject: RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Hi Lee,

     

    I don't want to look as though I am coming from another planet.  I understand your concerns and appreciate your comments.  I am also totally open to considering alternative approaches.

     

    The only question I have is, don't you think that an OASIS standard should be written in accordance with the OASIS rules, including its requirements on normative language and conformance language?

     

    Mary McRae's email indicated that the XML schema provided as a separate schema file must be normative, and that any part of it included in the main document must be regarded and marked as informative.  My interpretation is that this should also apply, as much as possible, to any equivalent provisions in whatever language they are expressed--XML Schema, plain English, or dictionary entries.

     

    I may be wrong, and would like to hear OASIS's opinion on this.  I do believe that it is extremely important for a standard to avoid all the risks inherent in redundant normative statements or insufficient normative statements.  If there is an issue of clarity in a standard (e.g., a technical provision that may be difficult to understand), that issue can be easily addressed (and should be addressed) by providing good descriptive text, summaries, synopses, figures, or other such informative material, accompanied by explicit references to the authoritative location in the same document (or in another document, which may be a schema document) containing the corresponding normative statement.

     

    That said, I am not asking for any action that may cause a delay in the publication of EDXL-HAVE or any of our standards, as I understand that there are important user communities waiting for them.  I will be happy with any resolution of my comments the TC will want to adopt.  Still, I am very interested in making sure that we eventually produce very good standards, free of redundance, ambiguity, and insufficient specification.

     

    Alessandro

     

     


    From: Lee Tincher [mailto:ltincher@evotecinc.com]
    Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 22:00
    To: 'Dwarkanath, Sukumar'; emergency@lists.oasis-open.org
    Subject: RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Well – I’ve been debating this response for hours….looks like we should go with the short-term solution as described – but I feel it is necessary to point out that if we were to begin using a standardized data dictionary in the future this would not be a problem.  NIEM is based on the Dublin-Core metadata descriptions (which specify normative definitions) and it has a well defined set of Naming and Design Rules (NDR).   Why do we need to continually re-invent the wheel?  The definitions described below do not meet accepted metadata definitions (again Dublin-Core) and we are running the risk of looking disjointed between our own EDXL standards.  Lets adopt a over-arching data dictionary for all of our future efforts and put the “normative/non-normative” arguments to rest.

    Thanks,

    Lee

    'We the unwilling, led by the unknowing have been doing the difficult with little for so long that we are now ready to tackle the impossible with nothing.' -- Local Fire communications reserve volunteer motto


    From: Dwarkanath, Sukumar [mailto:Sukumar_Dwarkanath@sra.com]
    Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 12:43 PM
    To: emergency@lists.oasis-open.org
    Subject: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    All,

    We reviewed all of Alessandro’s comments (it was a grueling 3.5 hr session), and many comments could be attributed to an underlying theme - lack of information in the data dictionary that explicitly identified the normative parts. As a resolution, many of the comments can be addressed by the following items:

    -         Separating the comments row into two rows: Constraints (which will include normative language) and Comments (non-normative), and

    -         Including a few sentences at the beginning of the data dictionary that identifies that the data dictionary is non-normative, except for the following: ‘Element’, ‘Usage’ and the new ‘Constraints’ row. The schema would be identified as normative, which I think was an implicit understanding.  

    So, my suggestion is to include the above given that:

    -         it is directly relevant to compliance

    -         it would not take too much effort to create the above pieces since, following the new compliance requirements from OASIS, I had earlier identified the normative pieces in the HAVE specification. If we decide on Tuesday, I can have an updated version by the end of the week.

    -         it addresses most comments

    I wanted to run it by the TC to get view and thoughts from others

    Most of the other comments are editorial and can be incorporated quite easily. It definitely provides clarity. I feel a few of them should be deferred to the next release. I will post the document with the suggested disposition soon.

    Thanks

    Sukumar

    ------------------------------------------------------

    Sukumar Dwarkanath

    Touchstone

    SRA International

    1920 N Street NW

    Washington DC 20002

     

    sukumar.dwarkanath@touchstone.com

    202-449-7761 (direct)

    703-629-4074 (mobile)

    202-338-6106 (fax)

     

     

     

     

    This electronic message transmission contains information from SRA International, Inc., which may be confidential, privileged or proprietary. The information is intended for the use of the individual or entity named above. If you are not the intended recipient, be aware that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or use of the contents of this information is strictly prohibited. If you have received this electronic information in error, please notify SRA immediately by telephone at 866-584-2143.



  • 7.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 14:14
     
    
    > 


  • 8.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 16:25
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    

    All,

    Up front I want to highlight the quality and thoughtfulness of the comments provided by Alessandro.  The focus now is upon the process, approach and timing to address this valid input given the process this standard has already been though and consideration of moving targets.  Mary’s clarification is an important one and we need to focus on the goal.  I believe that the approach being proposed is backwards.  My opinion is that both the  schema and data dictionary should be normative and be consistent.  Rather than skirting the actual issues by messing with definitions of  what’s normative and not normative in the dictionary, we should decide what changes can be incorporated now with minimal effort, and with no risk of an additional public review.  Substantive changes should not be addressed now, but in a future release 1.1 in conjunction with the NIEM data dictionary/RIM proposal Lee referred to (see below).  In this context, I need to understand which of the 70 comments specifically may be addressed now vs. a later release.

    So, my input for the immediate issue is this:

    1. I am not in favor of incorporating changes at this time that would take much more than a week of editing and review.  My opinion is that the geo issues could take us well beyond.
    2. I am not in favor of incorporating changes that would put the HAVE standard in any risk of yet another public review beyond the 60-day it is now entering.
    3. I believe the entire data dictionary should be normative (this is supported by and consistent with Dublin Core).  However, if compromise is needed perhaps “Comments” and “Requirements Supported” could be non-normative, with the rest (element, type, usage, definition) normative.
    4. Now, moving forward I agree with Lee’s input regarding NIEM.  A concept / proposal was presented during the San Diego face to face meetings.  Understanding more needs to be worked out, the TC gave a head-nod in principle which opened the door to pursue further program alignment work/agreements between the DM program, NIEM and NIMS.  Those agreements are being finalized and DM has just this week formally asked that the OASIS EM-TC now engage in defining a plan and process. 
      1. I agree that Alessandro note does support looking at NIEM as a common data dictionary / RIM concept, consumed by EDXL with a closed loop process to maintain the that dictionary (the NIEM EM domain). 

    Just my 2-cents.

    Thanks,

    Tim

    From: Mary McRae [mailto:mary.mcrae@oasis-open.org]
    Sent: Friday, September 28, 2007 8:56 AM
    To: 'Alessandro Triglia'; 'Lee Tincher'
    Cc: 'Dwarkanath, Sukumar'; emergency@lists.oasis-open.org
    Subject: RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    I’m afraid that you’ve read much more into my note than was intended.

    Here the language from the TC Process:

    All schema and XML instances, whether by inclusion or by reference, including fragments of such, must be well formed. All expressions must be valid. Each schema and XML instance that is part of the specification must be delivered in its own separate plain text file.

    The intent is that oftentimes errors occur when cutting/pasting schemas into a document – characters may be transposed to other symbols, bits lost, etc. It’s also extremely difficult for an end user to set up their environment if they have to cut/paste the schema out of a word processing document or worse, a PDF. So the thing that is actually parsable  is the normative version, if there is one. Note that the DITA TC produces its specification in both DTD and XSD formats – the DTD version is explicitly declared as normative. The TC can always decide that a schema isn’t normative, but they can’t decide that the version of the schema printed in the document is normative and the separate text file is informational only.

    Regards,

    Mary

    From: Alessandro Triglia [mailto:sandro@oss.com]
    Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 10:47 PM
    To: 'Lee Tincher'
    Cc: 'Dwarkanath, Sukumar'; emergency@lists.oasis-open.org
    Subject: RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Hi Lee,

     

    I don't want to look as though I am coming from another planet.  I understand your concerns and appreciate your comments.  I am also totally open to considering alternative approaches.

     

    The only question I have is, don't you think that an OASIS standard should be written in accordance with the OASIS rules, including its requirements on normative language and conformance language?

     

    Mary McRae's email indicated that the XML schema provided as a separate schema file must be normative, and that any part of it included in the main document must be regarded and marked as informative.  My interpretation is that this should also apply, as much as possible, to any equivalent provisions in whatever language they are expressed--XML Schema, plain English, or dictionary entries.

     

    I may be wrong, and would like to hear OASIS's opinion on this.  I do believe that it is extremely important for a standard to avoid all the risks inherent in redundant normative statements or insufficient normative statements.  If there is an issue of clarity in a standard (e.g., a technical provision that may be difficult to understand), that issue can be easily addressed (and should be addressed) by providing good descriptive text, summaries, synopses, figures, or other such informative material, accompanied by explicit references to the authoritative location in the same document (or in another document, which may be a schema document) containing the corresponding normative statement.

     

    That said, I am not asking for any action that may cause a delay in the publication of EDXL-HAVE or any of our standards, as I understand that there are important user communities waiting for them.  I will be happy with any resolution of my comments the TC will want to adopt.  Still, I am very interested in making sure that we eventually produce very good standards, free of redundance, ambiguity, and insufficient specification.

     

    Alessandro

     

     


    From: Lee Tincher [mailto:ltincher@evotecinc.com]
    Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 22:00
    To: 'Dwarkanath, Sukumar'; emergency@lists.oasis-open.org
    Subject: RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Well – I’ve been debating this response for hours….looks like we should go with the short-term solution as described – but I feel it is necessary to point out that if we were to begin using a standardized data dictionary in the future this would not be a problem.  NIEM is based on the Dublin-Core metadata descriptions (which specify normative definitions) and it has a well defined set of Naming and Design Rules (NDR).   Why do we need to continually re-invent the wheel?  The definitions described below do not meet accepted metadata definitions (again Dublin-Core) and we are running the risk of looking disjointed between our own EDXL standards.  Lets adopt a over-arching data dictionary for all of our future efforts and put the “normative/non-normative” arguments to rest.

    Thanks,

    Lee

    'We the unwilling, led by the unknowing have been doing the difficult with little for so long that we are now ready to tackle the impossible with nothing.' -- Local Fire communications reserve volunteer motto


    From: Dwarkanath, Sukumar [mailto:Sukumar_Dwarkanath@sra.com]
    Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 12:43 PM
    To: emergency@lists.oasis-open.org
    Subject: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    All,

    We reviewed all of Alessandro’s comments (it was a grueling 3.5 hr session), and many comments could be attributed to an underlying theme - lack of information in the data dictionary that explicitly identified the normative parts. As a resolution, many of the comments can be addressed by the following items:

    -         Separating the comments row into two rows: Constraints (which will include normative language) and Comments (non-normative), and

    -         Including a few sentences at the beginning of the data dictionary that identifies that the data dictionary is non-normative, except for the following: ‘Element’, ‘Usage’ and the new ‘Constraints’ row. The schema would be identified as normative, which I think was an implicit understanding.  

    So, my suggestion is to include the above given that:

    -         it is directly relevant to compliance

    -         it would not take too much effort to create the above pieces since, following the new compliance requirements from OASIS, I had earlier identified the normative pieces in the HAVE specification. If we decide on Tuesday, I can have an updated version by the end of the week.

    -         it addresses most comments

    I wanted to run it by the TC to get view and thoughts from others

    Most of the other comments are editorial and can be incorporated quite easily. It definitely provides clarity. I feel a few of them should be deferred to the next release. I will post the document with the suggested disposition soon.

    Thanks

    Sukumar

    ------------------------------------------------------

    Sukumar Dwarkanath

    Touchstone

    SRA International

    1920 N Street NW

    Washington DC 20002

     

    sukumar.dwarkanath@touchstone.com

    202-449-7761 (direct)

    703-629-4074 (mobile)

    202-338-6106 (fax)

     

     

     

     

    This electronic message transmission contains information from SRA International, Inc., which may be confidential, privileged or proprietary. The information is intended for the use of the individual or entity named above. If you are not the intended recipient, be aware that any disclosure, copying, distribution, or use of the contents of this information is strictly prohibited. If you have received this electronic information in error, please notify SRA immediately by telephone at 866-584-2143.



  • 9.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-29-2007 04:10
    
    
    
    
    


  • 10.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-29-2007 15:13
    I fully agree with everything that you wrote below.
    
    Alessandro
    
    
    > 


  • 11.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying thenormative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-29-2007 15:22
    I also agree with everything in principle, but we need to remember to 
    use the word "conformance" not "compliance." It is easy to confuse 
    the two, but OASIS has chosen the word "conformance" and we need to 
    be consistent in using it to avoid allowing any chance for confusion 
    to slip into our discussions.
    
    I am sure we mean the same thing, but semantics can get skewed all too easily.
    
    Other than that, me too!
    
    Cheers,
    Rex
    
    At 11:10 AM -0400 9/29/07, Alessandro Triglia wrote:
    >I fully agree with everything that you wrote below.
    >
    >Alessandro
    >
    >
    >>  


  • 12.  Re: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 03:21

    On 28 Sep 2007, at 11:59, Lee Tincher wrote:

    NIEM is based on the Dublin-Core metadata descriptions (which specify normative definitions) and it has a well defined set of Naming and Design Rules (NDR).   Why do we need to continually re-invent the wheel? 

    NIEM 2.0 is a bit confusing!

    I looked at the XSD for Emergency Management [1] Domain Schema and can see a lot of the HAVE and RM 
    elements/attributes already in there.

    How did they get in there "so quick" when we have not finished?



  • 13.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 08:34
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    

    That is a very long story that needs to be told via conference….but the short side is that they were put in as a “beta test” a year ago and they do not belong.   We have been asking to have them removed…..those elements/attributes were not harmonized against the NIEM core  (or even against themselves) so they are worse than useless in the terms of NIEM re-use…..

    Thanks,

    Lee

    'We the unwilling, led by the unknowing have been doing the difficult with little for so long that we are now ready to tackle the impossible with nothing.' -- Local Fire communications reserve volunteer motto


    From: Renato Iannella [mailto:renato@nicta.com.au]
    Sent: Thursday, September 27, 2007 11:19 PM
    To: emergency@lists.oasis-open.org
    Subject: Re: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    On 28 Sep 2007, at 11:59, Lee Tincher wrote:



    NIEM is based on the Dublin-Core metadata descriptions (which specify normative definitions) and it has a well defined set of Naming and Design Rules (NDR). Why do we need to continually re-invent the wheel?

    NIEM 2.0 is a bit confusing!

    I looked at the XSD for Emergency Management [1] Domain Schema and can see a lot of the HAVE and RM

    elements/attributes already in there.

    How did they get in there "so quick" when we have not finished?



  • 14.  Re: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying thenormative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 13:37
    
    
    Hi Renato,

    I wish this were an isolated instance, but NIEM is not the first or only place that unfinished OASIS TC specification work has turned up before a TC or working group (OASIS-wide, not just our EM TC) have approved a final document as a standard. One of the problems we are all working through is that the process of standard-writing and the requirements of the end-products are both still moving targets, and the recent addition of a Conformance Section requirement in OASIS is a case in point.

    Sigh,
    Rex



    At 1:18 PM +1000 9/28/07, Renato Iannella wrote:
    On 28 Sep 2007, at 11:59, Lee Tincher wrote:

    NIEM is based on the Dublin-Core metadata descriptions (which specify normative definitions) and it has a well defined set of Naming and Design Rules (NDR).   Why do we need to continually re-invent the wheel? 

    NIEM 2.0 is a bit confusing!

    I looked at the XSD for Emergency Management [1] Domain Schema and can see a lot of the HAVE and RM
    elements/attributes already in there.

    How did they get in there "so quick" when we have not finished?


    Cheers...  Renato Iannella
    NICTA

    [1] <http://www.niem.gov/niem-2/niem/domains/emergencyManagement/2.0/emergencyManagement.xsd>


    Rex Brooks
    President, CEO
    Starbourne Communications Design
    GeoAddress: 1361-A Addison
    Berkeley, CA 94702
    Tel: 510-898-0670


  • 15.  Re: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 13:57
    
    
    Note: I did not want to suggest that the new Conformance Section requirement is not a good thing. I think it is a very good thing, but I know of at least one instance where it shouldn't apply, e.g a purely abstract reference model.

    Cheers,
    REx

    At 6:37 AM -0700 9/28/07, Rex Brooks wrote:
    Hi Renato,

    I wish this were an isolated instance, but NIEM is not the first or only place that unfinished OASIS TC specification work has turned up before a TC or working group (OASIS-wide, not just our EM TC) have approved a final document as a standard. One of the problems we are all working through is that the process of standard-writing and the requirements of the end-products are both still moving targets, and the recent addition of a Conformance Section requirement in OASIS is a case in point.

    Sigh,
    Rex



    At 1:18 PM +1000 9/28/07, Renato Iannella wrote:
    On 28 Sep 2007, at 11:59, Lee Tincher wrote:

    NIEM is based on the Dublin-Core metadata descriptions (which specify normative definitions) and it has a well defined set of Naming and Design Rules (NDR).   Why do we need to continually re-invent the wheel? 

    NIEM 2.0 is a bit confusing!

    I looked at the XSD for Emergency Management [1] Domain Schema and can see a lot of the HAVE and RM
    elements/attributes already in there.

    How did they get in there "so quick" when we have not finished?


    Cheers...  Renato Iannella
    NICTA

    [1] <http://www.niem.gov/niem-2/niem/domains/emergencyManagement/2.0/emergencyManagement.xsd>


    --
    Rex Brooks
    President, CEO
    Starbourne Communications Design
    GeoAddress: 1361-A Addison
    Berkeley, CA 94702
    Tel: 510-898-0670


    Rex Brooks
    President, CEO
    Starbourne Communications Design
    GeoAddress: 1361-A Addison
    Berkeley, CA 94702
    Tel: 510-898-0670


  • 16.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 14:28
    
    
    
    
    
    
    


  • 17.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying thenormative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 15:48
    
    
    Hi Lee,

    I think that including NIEM as a resource and an example in the RIM a very good idea. It can give us a credible example of the development of absract principles that guide the creation of concrete classes (elements) in specifications. We can then show how the elements can be used in applications as instances. Of course that requires some practitioners who are willing to share their processes.

    Hopefully we will be able to clearly elucidate the chain from real world scenarios drawn from Subject Matter Experts to clearly drawn Use-Cases from which exacting requirements are derived. We should be able provide examples of how such requirements allow us to produce explicit elements in specifications that address and reference these requirements (which we do now in our data dictionary).

    I think that providing this kind of traceable clarity is one of most significant contributions we can make both to the practice of Emergency Response Management and to the process of writing standards. We have learned a boatload of lessons which we can continue to use. I would love to see your experiences distilled as a set of lessons learned and recommendations for improving these processes.

    As painful as these lessons can sometimes be, there are usually nuggets of practical wisdom in our experiences which might help make future work a tad easier, quicker, etc.

    Cheers,
    Rex

    At 10:25 AM -0400 9/28/07, Lee Tincher wrote:
    I need to stress that this submission was supposed to be in complete relational xml structure as a message - the NIEM people selected to rip it apart to the element/attribute level.  It was never supposed to be made public and it was presented as an exercise to see if external standards could be utilized in NIEM - it failed miserably and we fought very hard to have it removed.  We lost the initial battle and it went out public - the good news is that they are putting in change management and governance that will allow a community of interest (OASIS TC?) to add/delete/modify these elements and attributes - so this can be fixed if the TC chooses to be involvedŠ..
     
    Should the TC elect to use NIEM as part of the RIM we can make the changes necessary to the NIEM Emergency Management Domain as necessary to support the EDXL standards - one of the key points we have discussed with NIEM is that the name  "National" in the name does not meet our needs internationally.  They are excited about the international concept and are willing to put up the governance to allow for international involvementŠ..
     
    Thanks,
    Lee
    'We the unwilling, led by the unknowing have been doing the difficult with little for so long that we are now ready to tackle the impossible with nothing.' -- Local Fire communications reserve volunteer motto

    From: Rex Brooks [mailto:rexb@starbourne.com]
    Sent: Friday, September 28, 2007 9:37 AM
    To: Renato Iannella; emergency@lists.oasis-open.org
    Subject: Re: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary
     
    Hi Renato,
     
    I wish this were an isolated instance, but NIEM is not the first or only place that unfinished OASIS TC specification work has turned up before a TC or working group (OASIS-wide, not just our EM TC) have approved a final document as a standard. One of the problems we are all working through is that the process of standard-writing and the requirements of the end-products are both still moving targets, and the recent addition of a Conformance Section requirement in OASIS is a case in point.
     
    Sigh,
    Rex
     
     
     
    At 1:18 PM +1000 9/28/07, Renato Iannella wrote:
    On 28 Sep 2007, at 11:59, Lee Tincher wrote:


    NIEM is based on the Dublin-Core metadata descriptions (which specify normative definitions) and it has a well defined set of Naming and Design Rules (NDR).   Why do we need to continually re-invent the wheel? 

     
    NIEM 2.0 is a bit confusing!
     
    I looked at the XSD for Emergency Management [1] Domain Schema and can see a lot of the HAVE and RM
    elements/attributes already in there.
     
    How did they get in there "so quick" when we have not finished?
     
     
    Cheers...  Renato Iannella
    NICTA
     
    [1] <http://www.niem.gov/niem-2/niem/domains/emergencyManagement/2.0/emergencyManagement.xsd>
     
     
    --
    Rex Brooks
    President, CEO
    Starbourne Communications Design
    GeoAddress: 1361-A Addison
    Berkeley, CA 94702
    Tel: 510-898-0670


    Rex Brooks
    President, CEO
    Starbourne Communications Design
    GeoAddress: 1361-A Addison
    Berkeley, CA 94702
    Tel: 510-898-0670


  • 18.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 16:35
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    


  • 19.  RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying thenormative parts in the data dictionary

    Posted 09-28-2007 19:07
    
    
    Hi Lee,

    Understood and agreed. I would suggest we adopt whatever is finally decided in EDXL-HAVE for EDXL-RM, as we discussed in the EM-Msg meeting Thursday.

    Cheers,
    Rex

    At 12:33 PM -0400 9/28/07, Lee Tincher wrote:
    Rex,
     
    I am not aware of any standard Data Dictionary in our processŠ.as a matter of fact we have elements with the same names - but different definitions - within the EDXL standards now.  I agree with all of your statements, but I think it is a stretch to call our element descriptions in each of the differing standards a data dictionaryŠ.my hope is to standardize on one for all of our standards to remove confusionŠ.
     
    Just a clarification noteŠ..
     
    Thanks,
    Lee
    'We the unwilling, led by the unknowing have been doing the difficult with little for so long that we are now ready to tackle the impossible with nothing.' -- Local Fire communications reserve volunteer motto

    From: Rex Brooks [mailto:rexb@starbourne.com]
    Sent: Friday, September 28, 2007 11:48 AM
    To: Lee Tincher; 'Rex Brooks'; 'Renato Iannella'; emergency@lists.oasis-open.org
    Subject: RE: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary
     
    Hi Lee,
     
    I think that including NIEM as a resource and an example in the RIM a very good idea. It can give us a credible example of the development of absract principles that guide the creation of concrete classes (elements) in specifications. We can then show how the elements can be used in applications as instances. Of course that requires some practitioners who are willing to share their processes.
     
    Hopefully we will be able to clearly elucidate the chain from real world scenarios drawn from Subject Matter Experts to clearly drawn Use-Cases from which exacting requirements are derived. We should be able provide examples of how such requirements allow us to produce explicit elements in specifications that address and reference these requirements (which we do now in our data dictionary).
     
    I think that providing this kind of traceable clarity is one of most significant contributions we can make both to the practice of Emergency Response Management and to the process of writing standards. We have learned a boatload of lessons which we can continue to use. I would love to see your experiences distilled as a set of lessons learned and recommendations for improving these processes.
     
    As painful as these lessons can sometimes be, there are usually nuggets of practical wisdom in our experiences which might help make future work a tad easier, quicker, etc.
     
    Cheers,
    Rex
     
    At 10:25 AM -0400 9/28/07, Lee Tincher wrote:
    I need to stress that this submission was supposed to be in complete relational xml structure as a message - the NIEM people selected to rip it apart to the element/attribute level.  It was never supposed to be made public and it was presented as an exercise to see if external standards could be utilized in NIEM - it failed miserably and we fought very hard to have it removed.  We lost the initial battle and it went out public - the good news is that they are putting in change management and governance that will allow a community of interest (OASIS TC?) to add/delete/modify these elements and attributes - so this can be fixed if the TC chooses to be involved·..
     
    Should the TC elect to use NIEM as part of the RIM we can make the changes necessary to the NIEM Emergency Management Domain as necessary to support the EDXL standards - one of the key points we have discussed with NIEM is that the name  "National" in the name does not meet our needs internationally.  They are excited about the international concept and are willing to put up the governance to allow for international involvement·..
     
    Thanks,
    Lee
    'We the unwilling, led by the unknowing have been doing the difficult with little for so long that we are now ready to tackle the impossible with nothing.' -- Local Fire communications reserve volunteer motto


    From: Rex Brooks [mailto:rexb@starbourne.com]
    Sent: Friday, September 28, 2007 9:37 AM
    To: Renato Iannella; emergency@lists.oasis-open.org
    Subject: Re: [emergency] HAVE comments - explicitly identifying the normative parts in the data dictionary

     
    Hi Renato,
     
    I wish this were an isolated instance, but NIEM is not the first or only place that unfinished OASIS TC specification work has turned up before a TC or working group (OASIS-wide, not just our EM TC) have approved a final document as a standard. One of the problems we are all working through is that the process of standard-writing and the requirements of the end-products are both still moving targets, and the recent addition of a Conformance Section requirement in OASIS is a case in point.
     
    Sigh,
    Rex
     
     
     
    At 1:18 PM +1000 9/28/07, Renato Iannella wrote:
    On 28 Sep 2007, at 11:59, Lee Tincher wrote:
     
    NIEM is based on the Dublin-Core metadata descriptions (which specify normative definitions) and it has a well defined set of Naming and Design Rules (NDR).   Why do we need to continually re-invent the wheel? 
     
     
    NIEM 2.0 is a bit confusing!
     
    I looked at the XSD for Emergency Management [1] Domain Schema and can see a lot of the HAVE and RM
    elements/attributes already in there.
     
    How did they get in there "so quick" when we have not finished?
     
     
    Cheers...  Renato Iannella
    NICTA
     
    [1] <http://www.niem.gov/niem-2/niem/domains/emergencyManagement/2.0/emergencyManagement.xsd>
     
     
    --
    Rex Brooks
    President, CEO
    Starbourne Communications Design
    GeoAddress: 1361-A Addison
    Berkeley, CA 94702
    Tel: 510-898-0670

     
     
    --
    Rex Brooks
    President, CEO
    Starbourne Communications Design
    GeoAddress: 1361-A Addison
    Berkeley, CA 94702
    Tel: 510-898-0670


    Rex Brooks
    President, CEO
    Starbourne Communications Design
    GeoAddress: 1361-A Addison
    Berkeley, CA 94702
    Tel: 510-898-0670