First responder XML

Published: 29 October 2004 y., Friday
With almost every local jurisdiction and agency nationwide running different systems, officials hope a new data standard will help information-sharing programs overcome the differences between hardware and applications. The Emergency Data Exchange Language (EDXL) is a proposed Extensible Markup Language standard specific to the emergency management and response community. Experts in the public and private sectors developed the standard as part of the Homeland Security Department's Disaster Management e-Government initiative. Showcasing the standard during a demonstration this week at George Washington University in Washington, D.C., officials from the Emergency Interoperability Consortium, DHS, Maryland, Virginia and the District of Columbia emphasized the benefits of sharing alerts and information across a geographic region, regardless of a user's technology and applications. By better defining the information being shared and identifying the people and agencies involved, EDXL should help get around the problem of incompatible existing and proprietary systems, said Matt Walton, chairman of the consortium. Many groups are developing XML schemas for their unique purposes, such as the law enforcement community's Global Justice XML Data Model. "There are many systems out there ... [and] we have to live with what we have," Walton said. "We have to make sure that those systems continue to provide the service that they provided in the past, just enhanced, so that they now can perform the functions with other systems." This proposed emergency data standard is the next generation of the Common Alerting Protocol, which is already in use and approved by the Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards. Developing and using EDXL and the protocol are critically important steps, said Steve Cooper, chief information officer at DHS. However, the work can't stop there and has to move even faster into improvement and implementation, he said.
Šaltinis: fcw.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Paying Spammers Not to Spam

Founders of a new antispam service say they have developed a system to convince spammers to remove specific e-mail addresses from their mailing lists more »

EU delays vote on digital copyright plan

A vote on the European Union's proposed directive on the enforcement of intellectual property rights, which has been compared to a controversial U.S. law, has been pushed back to November more »

Microsoft updates Works

Microsoft on Tuesday launched a new version of Works Suite, its budget software package for consumers more »

The Newest Front in the Anti-Spam Wars

Rather than using a multitude of rules to determine what may or may not be spam, challenge-response software takes the approach of a club bouncer to keep undesirables out of users' inboxes more »

Nations to Develop Non-Windows Software

Japan, China, South Korea Agree to Develop Non-Windows Software, Official Says more »

Hotels.com Cuts Travelocity Loose

In his ongoing bid to colonize the Internet travel market, Barry Diller's Hotels.com has terminated a contract with Travelocity more »

The new law

Finns Rush to Register Internet Domains more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Hackers Tap Navy Credit Card System

A Department of Defense (DOD) investigative team is researching the recent hack of a Navy system that gained access to 13,000 purchase cards issued by Citibank more »

As the Worm Turns: Lessons from Blaster

Microsoft deserves some blame for the rapidly spreading Web virus more »