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Emerging Tech Talk #015 - Demo - new Skype 2.8 Beta for Mac

Tonight out at MacWorld, Skype is announcing their new 2.8 Beta for Mac OS X which rolls out some new features including screen sharing, WiFi access via Boingo, a new way to interact with Mood messages that are more like Twitter, chat prioritization and a number of other options. In this episode, host Dan York demonstrates those new features and shows what the new Skype 2.8 Beta for Mac OS X looks like... More information about Emerging Tech Talk can be found at http://blogs.voxeo.com/ett where you can subscribe to the RSS feed or follow on Twitter at http://twitter.com/voxeo . You can also subscribe via iTunes at: http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewPodcast?id=299219269 Comments or feedback can be sent to dyork@voxeo.com This show is a production of Voxeo Corporation

Author: voxeovideos
Keywords: skype voip voice emergingtechtalk danyork ett mac macosx apple macworld
Added: January 5, 2009


Emerging Tech Talk #011 - David Bryan about P2PSIP

What is Peer-to-Peer SIP (P2PSIP) all about? Who would use it? Is it really just an attempt to make an open standards Skype? What standards are being created? All those questions and more were discussed when host Dan York caught up with David Bryan, co-chair of the IETF P2PSIP Working Group, out at the IETF 73 meeting in November 2008 in Minneapolis, MN. More information about P2PSIP can be found at http://www.p2psip.org/ More information about Emerging Tech Talk can be found at http://blogs.voxeo.com/ett where you can subscribe to the RSS feed or follow on Twitter at http://twitter.com/voxeo . Comments or feedback can be sent to dyork@voxeo.com. This show is a production of Voxeo Corporation.

Author: voxeovideos
Keywords: emergingtechtalk p2psip sip danyork davidbryan ietf ietf73 voxeo ett
Added: December 11, 2008


Emerging Tech Talk #009 - Peter St. Andre about XMPP / Jabber

What is the XMPP / Jabber protocol all about? Who is using it? What is being done with it? What's next for it? And what is the connection to IETF? In this show, host Dan York spoke with Peter St. Andre, Executive Director of the XMPP Standards Foundation to discuss these and other questions. The video was recorded at the IETF 73 meeting in November 2008 in Minneapolis, Minnesota. More information about Emerging Tech Talk can be found at http://blogs.voxeo.com/ett where you can subscribe to the RSS feed or follow on Twitter at http://twitter.com/voxeo . Comments or feedback can be sent to dyork@voxeo.com. This show is a production of Voxeo Corporation.

Author: voxeovideos
Keywords: voxeo danyork emergingtechtalk ett ietf ietf73 peterstandre stpeter xmpp jabber im
Added: December 1, 2008


Emerging Tech Talk #008 - Chris DiBona of Google on sponsoring IETF, open standards and open source

Why did Google sponsor the 73rd meeting of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) this month (Nov 2008) in Minneapolis, MN? What is Google's interest in IETF and standards anyway? And what about open source? In this show, host Dan York sits down with Chris DiBona, Google's Open Source Programs Manager, to discuss these and other questions. More information about Emerging Tech Talk can be found at http://blogs.voxeo.com/ett where you can subscribe to the RSS feed or follow on Twitter at http://twitter.com/voxeo. Comments or feedback can be sent to dyork@voxeo.com. This show is a production of Voxeo Corporation.

Author: voxeovideos
Keywords: voxeo danyork emergingtechtalk ett chrisdibona google openstandards ietf ietf73 opensource
Added: November 26, 2008


Emerging Tech Talk #007 - Eric Burger about the SIP Forum

What is the SIP Forum? What does it do? Who can join? What is its relation to the IETF? In this show Dan York interviews SIP Forum Chairman Eric Burger about all of these topics and more. You can learn more about the SIP Forum and join as a (free) participant member at http://www.sipforum.org/ More information about Emerging Tech Talk can be found at http://blogs.voxeo.com/ett where you can subscribe to the RSS feed or follow on Twitter at http://twitter.com/voxeo. Comments or feedback can be sent to dyork@voxeo.com. This show is a production of Voxeo Corporation.

Author: voxeovideos
Keywords: danyork ericburger ietf sip sipforum standards voxeo
Added: November 24, 2008



More Information About IETF

Offices of the current IETF Secretariat (Association Management Solutions, LLC) in Fremont, California

The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) develops and promotes Internet standards, cooperating closely with the W3C and ISO/IEC standard bodies and dealing in particular with standards of the TCP/IP and Internet protocol suite. It is an open standards organization, with no formal membership or membership requirements. All participants and leaders are volunteers, though their work is usually funded by their employers or sponsors; for instance, the current chairperson is funded by VeriSign and the U.S. government's National Security Agency.[1]

Contents

Organization

The IETF is organized into a large number of working groups and informal discussion groups (BoF)s, each dealing with a specific topic. Each group is intended to complete work on that topic and then disband. Each working group has an appointed chair (or sometimes several co-chairs), along with a charter that describes its focus, and what and when it is expected to produce.

The working groups are organized into areas by subject matter. Current areas include: Applications, General, Internet, Operations and Management, Real-time Applications and Infrastructure, Routing, Security, and Transport. Each area is overseen by an area director (AD), with most areas having two co-ADs. The ADs are responsible for appointing working group chairs. The area directors, together with the IETF Chair, form the Internet Engineering Steering Group (IESG), which is responsible for the overall operation of the IETF.

The IETF is formally an activity under the umbrella of the Internet Society. The IETF is overseen by the Internet Architecture Board (IAB), which oversees its external relationships, and relations with the RFC Editor. The IAB is also jointly responsible for the IETF Administrative Oversight Committee (IAOC), which oversees the IETF Administrative Support Activity (IASA), which provides logistical, etc support for the IETF. The IAB also manages the Internet Research Task Force (IRTF), with which the IETF has a number of cross-group relations.

History

The first IETF meeting was on January 16, 1986, consisting of 21 U.S.-government-funded researchers. Initially, it met quarterly, but from 1991, it has been meeting 3 times a year. Representatives from non-governmental entities were invited starting with the fourth IETF meeting, in October of that year. Since that time all IETF meetings have been open to the public. The majority of the IETF's work is done on mailing lists, and meeting attendance is not required for contributors.

The initial meetings were very small, with fewer than 35 people in attendance at each of the first five meetings. The peak attendance in the first 13 meetings was only 120 attendees. This occurred at the 12th meeting held in January 1989. These meetings have grown in both participation and scope a great deal since the early 1990s; it had a peak attendance of almost 3000 at the December 2000 IETF held in San Diego, CA. Attendance declined with industry restructuring in the early 2000s, and is currently around 1200.[2]

During the early 1990s the IETF changed institutional form from an activity of the U.S. government to an independent, international activity associated with the Internet Society.

The IETF has at times been ascribed nearly magical abilities by the trade press, who assumed its mechanisms were responsible for the success of the Internet because it works on the Internet's core protocols. The reality that it is a group of engineers putting together specifications so that multiple vendors' products can operate across networks is considerably more mundane.

The details of its operations have changed considerably as it has grown, but the basic mechanism remains publication of draft specifications, review and independent testing by participants, and republication. Interoperability is the chief test for IETF specifications becoming standards. Most of its specifications are focused on single protocols rather than tightly-interlocked systems. This has allowed its protocols to be used in many different systems, and its standards are routinely re-used by bodies which create full-fledged architectures (e.g. 3GPP IMS).

Because it relies on volunteers and uses "rough consensus and running code" as its touchstone, results can be slow whenever the number of volunteers is either too small to make progress, or so large as to make consensus difficult, or when volunteers lack the necessary expertise. For protocols like SMTP, which is used to transport e-mail for a user community in the many hundreds of millions, there is also considerable resistance to any change that is not fully backwards compatible. Work within the IETF on ways to improve the speed of the standards-making process is ongoing but, because the number of volunteers with opinions on it is very great, consensus mechanisms on how to improve have been slow.

Because the IETF does not have members (nor is it an organisation per se), the Internet Society provides the financial and legal framework for the activities of the IETF and its sister bodies (IAB, IRTF,...). Recently the IETF has set up an IETF Trust that manages the copyrighted materials produced by the IETF. IETF activities are funded by meeting fees, meeting sponsors and by the Internet Society via its organizational membership and the proceeds of the Public Interest Registry.

IETF meetings vary greatly in where they are held. The list of past and future meeting locations can be found on the IETF meetings page. The IETF has strived to hold the meetings near where most of the IETF volunteers are located. For a long time, the goal was 3 meetings a year, with 2 in North America and 1 in either Europe or Asia (alternating between them every other year). The goal ratio is currently, across a two year period, to have 3 in North America, 2 in Europe and 1 in Asia. However, corporate sponsorship of the meetings is typically a more important factor and this schedule has not been kept strictly in order to decrease operational costs.

IETF chairs

The IETF Chair is selected by the NOMCOM process specified in RFC 3777 for a 2-year term, renewable.

Before 1993, the IETF Chair was selected by the IAB.

See also

References

  1. ^ Duffy Marsan, Carolyn (July 26, 2007). "Q&A: Security top concern for new IETF chair", Network World, IDG. Retrieved on 20 April 2008. 
  2. ^ "Past Meetings of the IETF". Retrieved on 2008-08-05.
  3. ^ "IETF Chairs by year". Retrieved on 2007-03-23.

External links

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