The Open Group
From Wikinfo
The Open Group is a industry consortium sponsored by IBM, Sun Microsystems, Hitachi, Hewlett-Packard and Fujitsu for forming de facto-standards in the field of software engineering, in particular APIs.
It was formed from a merger of the Open Software Foundation and X/Open.
The group is most known for their publication of the Single UNIX Specification paper, which (in the eyes of many OS developers) is quickly superseding the POSIX standards. In addition, they are the owners of the UNIX trademark. The Open Group provides conformance testing, certifications and white papers usually concerning Unix operating systems. Many of their papers are members-only.
The following is a partial list of inventions and standardizations by The Open Group.
- The Single UNIX Specification
- The Call Level Interface (the basis for ODBC)
- the Common Desktop Environment, CDE
- OpenDoc, a now defunct specification for compound documents
- LDAP, the Lightweight Directory Access Protocol
- The Motif GUI widgetset (used in CDE)
- For a time, The Open Group maintained and developed the X Window System. It was then transfered to X.Org.
The Open Group also certifies things they do not specify and control themselves, such as:
- CORBA, the Common Request Broker Architecture implementations, as specified by the Object Management Group.
- Linux Standard Base from the Free Standards Group.
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References
- Adapted from the Wikipedia article, "The_Open_Group" http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Open_Group, used under the GNU Free Documentation License

