FYI, the following announcement from the Linux Foundation might be useful as an example of how we can go forward with announcements for DFDL as a submission to ISO/IEC JTC1 once you are ready to proceed.
I suggest rather than waiting for a new version, you consider submitting DFDL 1.0 as an ISO standard and follow up with any updates as future submissions. Other approaches are possible, of course.
Let us know if you need any assistance or would like to have further discussions on this process.
Alan
Alan Sill, Ph.D
Managing Director, High Performance Computing Center
Adjunct Professor of Physics and Astronomy
Texas Tech University
Co-Director, NSF Center for Cloud and Autonomic Computing
President, Open Grid Forum
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This week, we are proud to announce that the Joint
Development Foundation (JDF), which became part of the Linux Foundation family in 2019, has been accepted as an ISO/IEC JTC 1 PAS (“Publicly Available
Specification”) Submitter. The
OpenChain Specification is the first specification submitted for JTC 1 review and recognition as an international standard.
The JDF was formed to simplify the process of creating new technical specification
collaboration efforts. Standards and specifications are vitally important for the creation or advancement of new technologies, ensuring that the resulting
products are well defined, provide predictable performance and that different implementations can interoperate with one another.