Platform
Technology Committee
PTC Overview
The purpose of the OMG's Platform Technology Committee (PTC) is
to solicit, propose, review, recommend modifications to, recommend
adoption of and maintain specifications of technology in pursuit of the
goals stated in the OMG by-laws. The principal foci of PTC activity is the
specification of OMG's Model Driven Architecture (MDA®); the Common
Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA®) applied at the enterprise
and embedded systems levels; and the Unified Modeling
Language (UML®), Meta Object Facility (MOF) and Common Warehouse
Metamodel (CWM®) modeling technologies.
PTC Organizational Structure and Membership
The PTC, an OMG Technical Plenary, is composed of a
Chair (an OMG employee), OMG member representatives and any other
individuals deemed appropriate by the Board of Directors and its chartered subgroups:
Subcommittees, Task Forces and Special
Interest Groups. Subcommittees are standing committees that typically
set their own missions and goals, and deal with procedural or other
non-standards issues. Task Forces are chartered to fulfill some
specific goal, usually the adoption of specifications in a particular
segment of OMG’s technical architecture. Revision Task Forces and
Finalization Task Forces are responsible for maintaining specifications.
Special Interest Groups exist to provide a forum where OMG members can
discuss technology-related topics of common interest which fall outside
the immediate work plan of the PTC. A list of PTC subgroups can be found within the TC
Subgroup Directory.
The structure of the PTC and its subgroups is
designed to ensure that all OMG members may participate in this
process. The voting
members of the PTC are the Contributing and Platform Members of the OMG. Voting
rights in PTC subgroups are restricted to OMG members above the level of
Trial.
PTC Meetings and Operating Rules
PTC meetings are conducted by the Chair, or another
appointed representative of the OMG, and under the general guidance of
Robert's Rules of Order. Meetings occur five times a year on the last
day of an OMG Technical Committee Meeting. Quorum for PTC meetings is
calculated as half the number of Voting Members which have been
represented, in person or by proxy, at two or more of the last three PTC
meetings.
The OMG Policies and Procedures covers the operation of
the entire OMG, including the PTC. It contains membership categories, the
organization, and the procedure for technology adoptions.
PTC Deliverables
RFPs
A Request for Proposal (RFP), which is an explicit
request to OMG members to submit a proposal for a specification meeting
the requirements stated in the RFP. Such proposals must be received by a
certain deadline and are evaluated by the issuing Task Force.
Submission Recommendations
Upon evaluation and recommendation by the issuing Task
Force and Architecture Board of a proposed specification filed against
an issued RFP, the PTC conducts a vote to recommend adoption of the
proposal to the OMG Board of Directors.
RFC Reviews and Recommendations
The Request for Comment (RFC) process allows an OMG
member to request OMG adoption of an uncontentious specification without
requiring a Request for Proposal to be issued. A critical part of this
process is a 90-day comment period in which the RFC is reviewed. Any
significant comment made against the RFC can halt the process. The PTC is responsible, upon endorsement by the reviewing Task Force and
Architecture Board, to issue the RFC for its comment period. If the RFC
passes its review cycle, the PTC conducts a vote to recommend its
adoption to the OMG Board of Directors.
Final Reports
Upon evaluation and recommendation by the Architecture
Board, the PTC conducts a vote to recommend adoption of Finalization and
Revision Task Force Final Reports to the OMG Board of Directors. The FTF
Final Report represents a completed, new specification. The RTF Final
Report represents a completed, revised specification.
RFIs and White Papers
Requests for Information (RFIs) are solicitations for
information to be used by a PTC subgroup to develop its roadmap or to
gather requirements for an RFP. White Papers are position papers
developed by a PTC subgroup. The PTC votes to issue either as a means of
conveying OMG endorsement of their publication.
Last updated on
02/14/2013
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