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Game Technology Study Committee

IEEE P1599 Recommended Practice for Definition of a Commonly Acceptable Musical Application Using the XML. The draft was completed in May 2007, went through a series of rounds and corrections by the IEEE SA staff, and was submitted for balloting in December 2007.

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Game Technology Study Committee

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  1. IEEE P1599 Recommended Practice for Definition of a Commonly Acceptable Musical Application Using the XML The draft was completed in May 2007, went through a series of rounds and corrections by the IEEE SA staff, and was submitted for balloting in December 2007. Changes to the draft prompted by balloters, staff and by the authors led to four recirculations, the last one in order to change the Recommended Practice from Trial Use to Full Use. This has ended with a participation of the balloters of 82% and an acceptance rate of 96%. As agreed with the IEEE SA Staff, the final draft is presently being submitted to NesCom and RevCom for the meeting in June 2008, and the procedure is expected to be completed by that time.

  2. Game Technology Study Committee Since March, the GTSG membership has increased five-fold. They've recently decided to move their base of operations back to the IEEE-CS eCommunity to help collaborate amongst the growing membership. Currently, they have a draft candidate PAR and several tentative PAR’s. Their efforts are to focus attention on a single PAR, versus the several which many of our members are interested in. They hope to submit their first PAR to NesCom within the next 2-3 months. Concurrently, their members are further eliciting volunteers, with the goal of making their group more representative of the industry (they're heavy on independent game developers and academics). Included in this outreach effort are the TFG (Don Black) and TFGT (Jim Parker). Several members are meeting at the Technology Summit next week, where they hope to establish a more concrete roadmap and attract more members.

  3. IEEE P2407 Standard for Personalized Health Informatics P2407 has a website available at www.ieee2407.org. The chair hosted a workshop in January 2007 at Kingston University in London. The full report is available at http://www.ieee2407.org/ws01.html There are plans to host a second workshop later in 2008 in the US. The current chair of P2704 was laid off from Motorola last June and has been unable to devote significant effort to the leadership of this working group. Note that this working group was approved by NesCom without the required signature of the Sponsor. Because of this, the sponsor chair was unaware of this project and has not been able to sufficiently been able to support this effort. NesCom procedures need to be enforsed.

  4. IEEE P2407 Standard for Personalized Health Informatics

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