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Communicating Smart Meter Value

Sep 9 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

If you are involved in Management or Customer Service and are responsible for communicating the value of smart meters to your utility customers, you don’t want to miss this online discussion - Communicating Smart Meter Value.  more...

Social Media: The new frontier in recruiting, communications and marketing

Sep 13 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

Join social media mavens Matthew Burks and Amanda Shewmake as they provide an insider's perspective on how HR, communications and marketing professionals in energy companies can harness the power of social media to be more effective and productive. more...

Eliminating Obstacles and Delivering the Benefits of the Smart Grid - IBM's Optimized Energy Value Chain (OEVC)

Sep 14 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

The convergence of power and information technologies in the smart grid has created opportunities for finer grained and broader controls of energy flows. These opportunities can improve electric service in multiple dimensions: lower cost, greater reliability, greater customer satisfaction, and more...

Achieving Operational Excellence - What to Consider Before Implementing or Upgrading Your Distribution Management Solutions

Sep 16 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

Significant cost over runs. Changing business requirements. A well thought out plan is essential. Attend this free webcast discussion to hear inside hear three experts in utility operations discuss what utilities need to evaluate when they are considering upgrading or more...

Outsmarting the Smart Grid: IT, Security and Communication Infrastructure  Challenges & Opportunities for Utilities

Sep 21 2010 - 2010-01-01 12:00:00 - Your City

The smart grid is shifting the playing field for utilities. And when the game changes, it pays to be prepared. A nimble solutions partner can help you design the solutions that keep operations on track, even as new challenges come more...

1st CSP Today Concentrated Solar Thermal Power Summit India

Sep 7 2010 - Sep 8 2010 - New Delhi India

Deliver a profitable, productive and commercially successful large scale CSP business in India. Building on the success of past events in USA, Europe & MENA, CSP Today brings to New Delhi the most relevant international experience for the concentrated solar more...

Offshore Wind Energy in North America's Great Lakes Conference

Sep 9 2010 - Sep 10 2010 - Toronto

Two day conference that tackles the most important challenges. A blend of European knowledge from the companies who have been installing offshore wind turbines for the last decade alongside local state governing bodies and leading project developers. Permitting, securing long more...

Autovation 2010

Sep 12 2010 - Sep 15 2010 - Austin, TX - USA

Autovation 2010 is a not-to-miss educational forum that will attract utility executives from around the world looking for new ways to optimize their operations through automation technologies. more...

Global Sustainable Bioenergy North American Convention

Sep 14 2010 - Sep 16 2010 - Minneapolis, MN - USA

The North American convention provides a remarkable opportunity to play a part in guiding renewable energy policy for the 21st century. Attendees will create a resolution that, along with similar resolutions already drafted on four other continents, will help set more...

GridWise Global Forum

Sep 21 2010 - Sep 23 2010 - Washington, DC - USA

Hosted by the GridWise(R) Alliance and the U.S. Department of Energy, the GridWise Global Forum will convene thought leaders from the highest levels of government, business, NGOS, and academia from around the world to discuss the ultimate enabling potential of more...

1. Intro to Nat Gas Trading & Hedging 2. Option Applications in Energy

Sep 20 2010 - Sep 23 2010 - Houston, TX - USA

Introduction to Natural Gas Trading & Hedging - This program provides a comprehensive understanding of the structures that underlie Natural Gas trading. Beyond Essentials: Option Applications in Energy - This course provides a solid practical and conceptual (non-quantitative) understanding of more...

Electric Business Understanding Seminar

Sep 20 2010 - Sep 21 2010 - Houston, TX - USA

Electric Business Understanding provides a comprehensive overview of the electric industry. Position yourself for career advancement by gaining a solid understanding of how the electric business works including key physical, market, and regulatory aspects and how market participants navigate this more...

Electric Market Dynamics Seminar

Sep 22 2010 - Sep 23 2010 - Houston, TX - USA

Electric Market Dynamics offers participants an in-depth understanding of North American electric markets and how they function. Enhance your career by furthering your knowledge of market structures, pricing mechanisms, services offered in markets, and how various participants use the markets more...

Gas and Electric Business Understanding Seminar

Oct 5 2010 - Oct 6 2010 - Los Angeles, CA - USA

Gas and Electric Business Understanding provides a comprehensive overview of the natural gas and electric industries. Position yourself for career success by gaining a solid understanding of how each business works, including key physical, market and regulatory aspects, as well more...

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A Three Case Study Comparison: Creating a Marketplace for Implementation Ready Interoperable Products
11.19.07   Rik Drummond, CEO and Chief Scientist, Drummond Group Inc.

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    The article shows the different outcomes of interoperability certification programs instituted for three well known industry standards; why some became heavily used and others did not even though all three standards were well designed to address business needs.

    Achieving Interoperability is Difficult

    Defining Information Technology (IT) interoperability and the roadmap to achieving this goal remains a difficult endeavor as it varies with the industry, the technology and the final purpose under discussion. Basic interoperability can be defined as two or more IT systems intercommunicating with security, timeliness, and compliance to their designed purpose. This usually comes down to the execution of a common business or technical process among the interoperable systems with adherence to the stated goal of the process. However, the techniques on how that “interoperability” is accomplished among different commercial software products are where the misinterpretation or confusion lies.

    The United States Government has been buying, promoting and using the phrase Commercial Off the Shelf (COTS) products for the past 20 years to reduce the associated implementation, integration and support cost in IT projects with great success. If we are talking about interoperability across Internet/supply chains then the only definition that makes sense is a community of COTS Interoperable products. Note that the word interoperable has no real usefulness without “COTS” or “community” in the context of wide scale implementation. All three are necessary to accomplish the goal – the goal of providing the end-user community of software purchasers with a set of known products that are COTS interoperable among themselves that may be installed and will intercommunicate in an interoperable manner with little or reduced requirements for costly professional services to implement.

    There are many nuances on how to accomplish a community of COTS interoperable products depending on technologies under test, the target market place for the products, the end network configurations the products must operate within and whether the market place is composed of early or late adopters. Since all of these factors cannot be dissected here, I’ll focus on three case studies of attempts to develop a community of COTS interoperable products. One of these is very successful, one of these is partially successful and one has not lived up to its potential. The different outcomes have less to do with the technical details of the standard, but rather on the test methodology, test environment and the degree to which the end-user community chose to support the certification programs.

    The Three Standards

    The three standards are RFC4130, RFC3335, and the set of RosettaNet standards.

    1. Very Successful: RFC4130 is a secure, reliable messaging standard based on HTTP which is heavily used across the world in a variety of industries including retail and financial services.

    2. Partially Successful: RFC3335 is a secure reliable messaging standard based on SMTP which is less used, across the world primarily in retail.

    3. Not Met Potential: RosettaNet standards have two components secure messaging and document. The standard is used in the Pacific Rim and the USA in the computer and consumer electronic industries.

    Factors for Success

    Although there are many differences in the above three cases of how the interoperable products were developed, there are three major factors which I strongly believe, having been involved with each of these, determined the degree of success:

    The Techniques: The techniques used to achieve the technical “interoperability” between the products. There are various techniques for achieving technical interoperability depending on whether one is dealing with communications technologies, syntax, semantics, or business process standards to name a few. However, regardless of which of the above one is dealing with, the two most common methods are:

    • The conformance engine technique – one-to-many testing.
    • The other is the full matrix interoperability technique – all-to-all testing.

    The Testing Environment: The testing environment and setting for the interoperability tests. Interoperability provides little benefit to the end-user community if it only works in a laboratory test environment, which I’ll refer to as “product interoperability”. It also must translate into interoperability in the production/ real life environment in order to provide a major cost saving to the end-user companies – ROI, of course being the key driver.

    End-user Support: The degree of support and adoption of COT interoperable products by the end user community is critical. Undergoing software certification testing requires an investment of both time and money from the software vendor. Unless there is unified industry support among end-users to only purchase certified software products, there is little incentive for software companies to invest the time and money for interoperability certification testing.

    Standards Success Analysis

    RFC4130 (AS2):

    1. Was tested in a full matrix interoperable test environment – all products to all products,

    2. The test was not conducted in a laboratory, but over the live Internet simulating the a live implementation environment and finally

    3. A major group of end users committed to only using certified interoperable products. These three things developed a highly success full set of over 50 COTS products that were implementation ready, that is “a community of COTS interoperable products.”

    Users report that they can install products and start communicating within a few hours if certified products are used versus days or weeks when using non-certified products. This saved the industry tens of millions of dollars by avoiding the need for professional services.

    The end result was:

    • Reduced the cost to operate Reduced capital IT cost
    • Reduced installation cost
    • Reduced upgrade cost
    • Better security management
    • More choice in products
    • More price points & features

    RFC3335 (AS1):

    1. Was tested in a full matrix interoperable test environment – all products to all products, over Internet to simulate a live production environment, but

    2. Did not have a group of users commit to implementing only interoperable certified products in their supply chains.

    These products install as easily and quickly as above RFC4130 (AS2); however there are a little more than 10 of these products offerings world wide. A community of COTS products developed, but a successful marketplace did not and hence little ongoing investment by the software community for implementing additional bells-and-whistles.

    The set of RosettaNet Standards:

    1. Used the conformance engine technique – one-to-many testing

    2. They were tested over internet but in a partially sequestered test lab environment and finally

    3. No set of end-users committed to using only certified products in their supply chains.

    These products are time consuming to install at the messaging level. Since the conformance engine had bugs requiring ongoing fixes, that meant that Product A may have tested against a different code base version of the reference product than Product B. In a one to many testing scenario, if the reference or conformance engine code base is changing on an ongoing basis, then interoperability becomes an elusive, constantly moving target.

    RosettaNet has expanded messaging options by adding RFC4130 and ebXML which will greatly enhance the message level COTS. However this will not solve the ongoing problems associated with the document types that are still tested in a one to many manner. This is a nice standard which did not live up to its potential because the wrong means of technical testing was chosen and no end-users committed to using only certified products in their supply chains.

    Conclusion

    The lessons learned from above are straightforward:

    1. Interoperability testing should reflect the production environment of the products. Conformance testing does not imply interoperability and should be thought of as a pre-stage event to prepare for full product-to-product testing.

    2. The production of a community of COTS interoperable products, that is implementation ready products, is much more than a technical effort. It requires a marketing and business plan to educate the market on the value of certified products and the endorsement and support of the end-user community to support the purchase of certified COTS interoperable products.

    For information on purchasing reprints of this article, contact Tim Tobeck ttobeck@energycentral.com.
    Copyright 2010 CyberTech, Inc.
     
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