World Standards Day










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World Standards Day


World Standards Day is renowned internationally every year on October 14th. The day honors the endeavors of the thousands of experts who widen voluntary standards within standards development organizations such as the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC), International Organization for Standardization (ISO), and the International Telecommunication Union (ITU). The aim of World Standards Day is to raise awareness among watchdogs, industry and consumers as to the importance of standardization to the global economy.

October 14 was exclusively chosen to smudge the date, in 1946, when delegates from 25 countries first gathered in London and decided to create an international organization focused on facilitating standardization. Even though ISO was formed one year later, it wasn't until 1970 that the first World Standards Day was celebrated. Each year, ISO determines a theme based on a current aspect of standardization.

Around the globe, diverse activities are preferred by national bodies to commemorate the date. The United States holds a U.S. Celebration of World Standards Day on October 13th. The Standards Council of Canada (SCC), Canada's national accreditation body, celebrates World Standards Day together with the international community. The SCC publishes its annual problem of CONSENSUS magazine on World Standards Day, as well as hosts actions or plans other inventiveness on this date.

Mainly creators of digital products intend their products to be usable: effective, efficient and satisfying. Yet, what several designers quite normally fall short to do is to apply modern usability best practice or test out their products before commence. When real users find the products tricky or unwieldy to use or fail to get the preferred results and stop using the product, this can come as a shock to the unwary designer.

Subsequent international usability standards can provide assurance to designers that their products, digital or otherwise, will effort for their users.

In today's world it needs to have a high level of expectation that things will work the way we expect them to work.

It expects that when we pick up the phone it will be able to directly connect to any other phone on the planet. We expect to be able to connect to the Internet and be provided with news and in sequence instantly. When we fall ill, we rely on the healthcare equipment used to treat us. When we drive our cars, we have confidence that the engine management, steering and braking, and child safety systems are reliable. We expect to be protected against electrical power failure and the harmful effects of pollution.

International standards give us this confidence worldwide. Indeed one of the key objectives of standardization is to afford this confidence. Systems, products and services perform as we expect them to because of the essential features specified in international standards.

International standards for products and services fortify quality, ecology, safety, reliability, interoperability, efficiency and effectiveness. They do all of this while giving manufacturers confidence in their talent to reach out to global markets safe in the facts that their product will perform globally.

Interoperability creates economies of balance and ensures users can attain equal service wherever they travel. So international standards assistance consumers, manufacturers and service providers alike. Importantly, in mounting countries this hastens the exploitation of new products and services and encourages economic development.

International standards create this confidence by being developed in an atmosphere of openness and transparency, where every stakeholder can contribute.

It is the stated intend of the WSC partners IEC, ISO and ITU to assist and boost this confidence globally, so as to unite the world with international standards.

The Standards-making process itself creates confidence for consumers. International Standards development is based on the contribution of many experts (businesses, government, consumers, associations, national government organizations, and so on) from all over the globe.

Standards provide yardsticks that national and regional rules fail to provide, due to a lack of harmonization or availability of such regulations. They also provide measurement tools (through metrology) and make certain comparability of results through common analytical methods.

International Standards facilitate schemes interoperability and compatibility. For model, the A4 format facilitates the increase of printers, photocopiers, and other digitizers that can be used by each person, creating worldwide marketing opportunities.

International Standards can encourage the transfer of new technologies by enabling market contact for innovative solutions and providing confidence to users.

Lastly, Standards development work is no longer curbed to products, but also addresses societal concerns such as the environment, services, accessibility, and social responsibility. Confidence in Standards relies not just on the priceless guidance they provide, but also on their capability to deal with perceptive issues for society and to foresee outlook challenges for the cohort to come.