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iECM Briefing: XML Community of Practice

iECM Briefing: XML Community of Practice. Betsy Fanning AIIM. About AIIM Standards. ANSI Accredited ISO TC 171, Document Management Applications – Secretariat ISO TC 171, Document Management Applications, SC2, Application Issues – Secretariat

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iECM Briefing: XML Community of Practice

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  1. iECM Briefing: XML Community of Practice Betsy Fanning AIIM

  2. About AIIM Standards • ANSI Accredited • ISO TC 171, Document Management Applications – Secretariat • ISO TC 171, Document Management Applications, SC2, Application Issues – Secretariat • U. S. TAG (Technical Advisory Group) to ISO TC 171 Administrator • Industry Standards Developer – AIIM Recommended Practices (ARP) • Open Source Standards for Document Management • Liaison Relationships

  3. AIIM Standardization Work • Micrographics • Digital Imaging • Document Management • Workflow • Legality Issues • Metadata • XML • Integrated EDM/ERM Functional Requirements • PDF • iECM

  4. PDF/Archive Success Story • October 2002 Initial meeting of AIIM/NPES PDF/A committee • April 2003 Initial Working Draft (WD) • August 2003 New Work Item (NWI) approved and Joint Working Group (JWG) formed • December 2003 First Committee Draft (CD) approved • September 2004 Second CD approved • June 2005 Draft International Standard (DIS) unanimously approved • September 2005 Published

  5. There is a need to find, access (read/write), aggregate, and report on information that is stored in data stores implemented on a variety of platforms, making data available through a variety of means, and controlled by a variety of applications. Notification of new information relevant to a particular topic of interest is also a common theme.

  6. The Pain Points • Knowledge of data stores. • Access through individual applications and/or proprietary mechanisms. • Varying data formats (files and metadata) and taxonomies. • A variety of different security protocols are used for authentication, authenticity, directory services, etc. • Creation of an aggregated set of information is difficult due to many of the items noted above. • There is often a need to alert the user (or consuming system) that previously retrieved content objects (documents, files, etc.) have been changed since they were retrieved. The content object's metadata may also have been changed relevant to a prior search (e.g. in such a way as to make the retrieved document no longer a member of the same search results.) • Moving content from one repository to another. • Repository synchronization (even if one-way only)

  7. Enterprise Applications File Servers Repositories DCTM MSFT Siebel IBM OpenText SAP Novell Exchange Solaris Vignette Notes iECM: Simple Idea… … and we have applications And the applications don’t want to talk differently to each store!! We have content stores…

  8. Mission/Vision Statement Interoperable Enterprise Content Management iECM will create an interoperability framework that enables information sharing across organizational and system boundaries.

  9. iECM Charter The iECM Consortium will: • Inform and assist stakeholder communities in challenges of content management • Responsible for developing and maintaining an architecture • Endorse existing standards • Collaborate with standards organizations to enhance applicable existing standards • Develop standard where no standards exist

  10. Reference Model • iECM Services Model • Set of common content management functions (document transfer, check-in/out, etc.) • iECM Domain and Metadata Model • Normalization of information that flows through the services model (files, folders, metadata, etc.) • iECM Component Model • Schema describing the entities of a content management ecosystem (Services model, Domain and Metadata model, access mechanisms, protocols, and repositories)

  11. iECM Communities of Interests • Enterprise Consumers • Fortune 1000; Reduce Complexity, Cost. Increase control and access to corporate information assets • Government Agencies; 85% of budget only manages 15% of data. • System Integrators; Risk mitigation in deploying enterprise ECM systems • Manufacturers and VARs • SDOs and Industry Groups (FSTC, Domea, Open Group, and others)

  12. Organizational Structure

  13. Timeline • May 2005 – Initial Meeting • September 2005 – Washington, DC Organizational Meeting • October 2005 – Initiated weekly conference calls • November 2005 – New York City – Scope and Outreach • December 2005 – Draft Scope – Internal approval • January 2006 – Redmond, WA • March 2006 – Boulder, CO • May 2006 – Philadelphia – AIIM 2006 • October 2006 – Reference model • January 2007 – Architecture

  14. How to Join… • Following AIIM Standards Development Process • Email intent to participate • Listserv • Wiki • Membership Agreement • Agencies $ 2,500 • Departments $ 7,000 • Individual $ 250 • Weekly Conference Calls • 1-888-742-8686 or 1-303-928-2600 • Conference ID: 5291291 • Technical Committee – Fridays at 11 a.m. Eastern • Outreach Committee – Fridays at 2:45 p.m. Eastern

  15. Where to get more information • AIIM Web Site – www.aiim.org • AIIM Standards Page – www.aiim.org/standards • iECM Wiki – http://iecm.editme.com • DOC.1 – weekly email service • AIIM E-DOC Magazine – bi-monthly periodical • Contact – bfanning@aiim.org 301-755-2682

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