Re: IETF turns 30

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--On Thursday, January 14, 2016 15:48 +0100 Eliot Lear
<lear@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> Hi Dan,
> 
> On 1/14/16 11:50 AM, Romascanu, Dan (Dan) wrote:
>> Happy Birthday!
>> 
>> So, at IETF 1 the following areas of concern were identified: 
>> 
>> IETF Areas of Concern -
>> o Protocol Development and Stabilization,
>> o Protocol Conformance,
>> o An Implementors Support Organization,
>> o Internet Performance Measurements,
>> o ISO Conversion.
>> 
>> Only one of them seems clearly out of scope 30 years after. 
>> 
> 
> As I recall, the interesting thing about the last bullet when
> I started in the IETF just a little later was that there was
> general industry agreement that such a conversion was needed.
> The only debate was over which direction it should occur.

Whatever debate you are referring to, the IETF wasn't having it.
We didn't retire the "OSI Integration" Area (with Erik Huizer
and Dave Piscitello as the last two co-chairs) until circa IETF
25 in November 1992 and my recollection is that it was clear
until not long before that that the plan was to get Internet
applications and upper layers running over an OSI substrate.
By the time the area was finally shut down (and most or all of
the remaining WGs folded into Applications, with Eric moving
over), the goal was clearly to figure out which OSI applications
were in use and/or likely to be worth anything going forward and
get them to work over TCP and/or IP.

--On Thursday, January 14, 2016 15:33 +0100 Alexandre Petrescu
<alexandre.petrescu@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

>> I imagine you mean the last bullet point? It was only the
>> last 1-2 IETFs where a new draft was published that (again)
>> suggested a profile to carry IS-IS over IPv6, so depending on
>> what you mean by "ISO conversion", I'm not so sure this is
>> out of scope yet :P
> 
> :-) there is active ISO liaison.

Not sure what you are thinking about.  We've never had a liaison
to ISO: it really wouldn't make any sense even if either we or
they were interested.  We've never even had a liaison to ISO/IEC
JTC1.   One could argue either way about a JTC1 liaison making
sense, but the politics, justification, and interest have never
come together at the same time to make that happen.  We do have
active liaison relationships with a number of ISO TCs and a
number of ISO/IEC JTC1 SCs but, AFAIK, none of them are working
on the OSI stack any more either.

   john





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