Applications and Real-Time Area (art)
Group history
Date | By | Action |
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2024-08-30 | Orie Steele | Description changed to The ART Area works on the application layer and related protocols: Real-time applications. - These are protocols that enable interactive human-to-human communication … Description changed to The ART Area works on the application layer and related protocols: Real-time applications. - These are protocols that enable interactive human-to-human communication (see RFC 3550). Groups in this category are working on things such as real-time web communications, teleconferencing, emergency services communication, internet telephony, and instant messaging. Traditional applications. - These are the protocols we've generally thought of in relation to the application layer. They include such things as email, calendaring, directory services, provisioning and access protocols related to DNS and IP and support for constrained environments. Application building blocks. - These are designed to be used with a variety of more specific applications. They include compression, codecs, internationalization; JSON, XML, and CBOR; media types; URNs; and URI schemes. from The ART Area works on the application layer and related protocols: <b>Real-time applications.</b> - These are protocols that enable interactive human-to-human communication (see RFC 3550). Groups in this category are working on things such as real-time web communications, teleconferencing, emergency services communication, internet telephony, and instant messaging. Traditional applications. - These are the protocols we've generally thought of in relation to the application layer. They include such things as email, calendaring, directory services, provisioning and access protocols related to DNS and IP and support for constrained environments. Application building blocks. These are designed to be used with a variety of more specific applications. They include compression, codecs, internationalization; JSON, XML, and CBOR; media types; URNs; and URI schemes. |
2024-08-30 | Orie Steele | Description changed to The ART Area works on the application layer and related protocols: <b>Real-time applications.</b> - These are protocols that enable interactive human-to-human communication … Description changed to The ART Area works on the application layer and related protocols: <b>Real-time applications.</b> - These are protocols that enable interactive human-to-human communication (see RFC 3550). Groups in this category are working on things such as real-time web communications, teleconferencing, emergency services communication, internet telephony, and instant messaging. Traditional applications. - These are the protocols we've generally thought of in relation to the application layer. They include such things as email, calendaring, directory services, provisioning and access protocols related to DNS and IP and support for constrained environments. Application building blocks. These are designed to be used with a variety of more specific applications. They include compression, codecs, internationalization; JSON, XML, and CBOR; media types; URNs; and URI schemes. from The ART Area works on the application layer and related protocols: # Real-time applications. - These are protocols that enable interactive human-to-human communication (see RFC 3550). Groups in this category are working on things such as real-time web communications, teleconferencing, emergency services communication, internet telephony, and instant messaging. Traditional applications. These are the protocols we've generally thought of in relation to the application layer. They include such things as email, calendaring, directory services, provisioning and access protocols related to DNS and IP and support for constrained environments. Application building blocks. These are designed to be used with a variety of more specific applications. They include compression, codecs, internationalization; JSON, XML, and CBOR; media types; URNs; and URI schemes. |
2024-08-30 | Orie Steele | Description changed to The ART Area works on the application layer and related protocols: # Real-time applications. - These are protocols that enable interactive human-to-human … Description changed to The ART Area works on the application layer and related protocols: # Real-time applications. - These are protocols that enable interactive human-to-human communication (see RFC 3550). Groups in this category are working on things such as real-time web communications, teleconferencing, emergency services communication, internet telephony, and instant messaging. Traditional applications. These are the protocols we've generally thought of in relation to the application layer. They include such things as email, calendaring, directory services, provisioning and access protocols related to DNS and IP and support for constrained environments. Application building blocks. These are designed to be used with a variety of more specific applications. They include compression, codecs, internationalization; JSON, XML, and CBOR; media types; URNs; and URI schemes. from The ART Area works on the application layer and related protocols: Real-time applications. These are protocols that enable interactive human-to-human communication (see RFC 3550). Groups in this category are working on things such as real-time web communications, teleconferencing, emergency services communication, internet telephony, and instant messaging. Traditional applications. These are the protocols we've generally thought of in relation to the application layer. They include such things as email, calendaring, directory services, provisioning and access protocols related to DNS and IP and support for constrained environments. Application building blocks. These are designed to be used with a variety of more specific applications. They include compression, codecs, internationalization; JSON, XML, and CBOR; media types; URNs; and URI schemes. |
2024-08-30 | Orie Steele | Description changed to The ART Area works on the application layer and related protocols: Real-time applications. These are protocols that enable interactive human-to-human communication (see … Description changed to The ART Area works on the application layer and related protocols: Real-time applications. These are protocols that enable interactive human-to-human communication (see RFC 3550). Groups in this category are working on things such as real-time web communications, teleconferencing, emergency services communication, internet telephony, and instant messaging. Traditional applications. These are the protocols we've generally thought of in relation to the application layer. They include such things as email, calendaring, directory services, provisioning and access protocols related to DNS and IP and support for constrained environments. Application building blocks. These are designed to be used with a variety of more specific applications. They include compression, codecs, internationalization; JSON, XML, and CBOR; media types; URNs; and URI schemes. from The ART area develops application protocols and architectures in the IETF. The work in the area falls into roughly three categories, with blurry distinctions between them. One category consists of protocols and architectures specifically designed to support delay-sensitive interpersonal communications via voice, video, instant messaging, presence, and other means, otherwise known as "real-time" applications and services. A second category consists of protocols and architectures to support applications that may be more tolerant of delay, including HTTP, email, and FTP. The third category consists of building blocks that are designed for use across a wide variety of applications and may be employed by both real-time and non-real-time applications, such as URI schemes, MIME types, authentication mechanisms, data formats, metrics, and codecs. |
2023-02-26 | Liz Flynn | Resources changed to tracker https://trac.ietf.org/trac/art/report/1 (Issue tracker), wiki https://wiki.ietf.org/group/art (Wiki) from tracker https://trac.ietf.org/trac/art/report/1 (Issue tracker), wiki https://trac.ietf.org/trac/art/wiki (Wiki) |
2015-06-12 | Amy K. Vezza | |
2015-05-28 | Amy K. Vezza |