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The Architectural Woodwork Institute (AWI) seeks to be the global leader in architectural woodwork standards and related interior finishes. It has released a redline for public review and comment its standard AWI 0620 Finish Carpentry/Installation. AWI 0620 is written to provide comprehensive guidelines for the installation and finishing of architectural woodwork and related interior products. This standard should be important to the largest non-residential building construction market in the United States.
Comments are due August 20th. You may obtain an electronic copy from: [email protected]. Send your comments to the same email address (with copy to [email protected]). All consensus standards involving the architectural trades are on the agenda of our weekly Open Door teleconference — every Wednesday, 11 AM Eastern time (CLICK HERE to log in). Additionally, we have set aside an hour per month to run through all consensus documents that are referenced in typical design, construction, operations & maintenance contracts. The next teleconference is scheduled for July 23rd, 11 AM Eastern time, as described in the link below:
Issue: [18-189]
Category; Architectural
ANSI Standards Action Notice | PDF Page 7
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Noticed or un-noticed, standards are a part of our lives. If you standardize everything, you dampen innovation. If you standardize nothing, the result is non-interoperable clusters that are not easily integrated. Redundancy and destructive competition results in a lower-quality “deliverable”.
The difficulty the education education industry the United States has had in controlling its costs through consensus standardization processes lies in its ambivalence about whether it is a “culture” or a “business”. It is a little of each. We believe that a great deal of the cost structure of the US education industry could be managed by participating in ANSI standards processes and conforming to the leading practice discovery that results. Headwinds for fully realizing this possibility come from both the cultural and business side.
As explained here over the past several years, the US education industry is a significant stakeholder in the development of international technical and business standards through the American National Standards Institute (ANSI). Now comes another opportunity to collaborate with the Standards Administration of the People’s Republic of China (SAC) through ANSI. At the moment we are not advocating any #TotalCostofOwnership concepts for the safety and sustainability of the emergent #SmartCampus we feel that, given our tenure in infrastructure standards advocacy (see ABOUT) we should at least pass on what we know to education industry administrators, faculty, students and their supporting communities about other policy-oriented collaborations. ANSI’s collaboration with the SAC is important to at least understand what is happening for the following reasons:
We cite the absence of the US education industry as a US TAG Administrator on the ISO Educational Organization Management standard as a primary example of US education industry indifference. We have suggested that an industry which seeks international revenue — and can do a better job controlling its costs — could transform itself in a fashion similar to the way the global automotive manufacturing industry transformed itself thirty-odd years ago with the deployment of the ISO-9000 series of management standards. (Learn more HERE)
With or without the education industry then, the American National Standards Institute continues its discussions with the Standards Administration of the People’s Republic of China on enterprise standards on July 17th in Hangzhou, China. Specifics are linked below:
ANSI-SAC Industry Roundtable on Enterprise Standards
ANSI’s update on international standards action can be found at this link: ISO/IEC/ITU coordination – New work items
We keep all international standards relevant to the education industry on the standing agenda of our Open Door teleconferences — every Wednesday, 11 AM Eastern time. Everyone is welcomed. CLICK HERE to log in.
Issue: [Various]
Category: Academics, International, Public Policy, #SmartCampus, US Department of Commerce, National Institute of Standards & Technology
Colleagues: Mike Anthony, Christine Fischer
S. Joe Bhatia explains the status of US education industry in a talk at the University of Michigan Ross School of Business in May 2016.
Posted January 12, 2018 (China Standardization Law)
The National People’s Congress of the People’s Republic of China officially promulgated China’s Standardization Law on November 4, 2017. The original Chinese version can be accessed on the China legislature site.
The American National Standards Institute(ANSI) has been closely monitoring the rollout of the reform of China’s standardization system, and has actively engaged the Chinese government throughout the process of updating the standardization law.
The Standardization Law serves as the legal underpinning for China’s system, and its revision (the first since 1988) is a major component of China’s ongoing standardization reform initiative. ANSI’s comments on the revisions issued in March 2016, May 2017, and September 2017 are available on the Institute’s Sharepoint library.
ANSI has prepared a reference translation for the final law, which tracked the changes since the last draft, as a courtesy available to ANSI members only.
Changes in the standardization law from the version released in September 2017 mainly comprise restructured provisions. There are some promising additions such as the state encouraging the extensive seeking of comments in the development of standards (Article 4), and the clarification that standards would be reviewed every five years (Article 29). However, ANSI believes that more can be done in addressing the following concerns which were conveyed in earlier comments:
– Referencing and upholding the World Trade Organization (WTO)’s Technical Barriers to Trade (TBT) Agreement;
– Limiting and focusing the self-disclosure requirements for so-called “enterprise standards”;
– Including more language on fair and open participation in standards development activities;
– Clarifying the circumstances under which one type of standard might become another type of standard; and
– Referencing the copyright law.
With the law entering into force in 2018, ANSI will continue to reiterate these concerns to the Chinese government through ANSI’s China program and will continue to monitor the overall implementation of China’s standardization reform.
For more information on ANSI’s China program, please visit www.standardsportal.org. Questions may be directed to [email protected].
Link to ANSI January 12, 2018 Update: (Click here)
Link to the original ANSI November 11, 2017 posting: (Click here)
New update alert! The 2022 update to the Trademark Assignment Dataset is now available online. Find 1.29 million trademark assignments, involving 2.28 million unique trademark properties issued by the USPTO between March 1952 and January 2023: https://t.co/njrDAbSpwB pic.twitter.com/GkAXrHoQ9T
— USPTO (@uspto) July 13, 2023
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