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General 802.11-Opening-Presentation
March 2007 doc.: IEEE /0340r0 March 2007 General Opening-Presentation Date: Authors: Notice: This document has been prepared to assist IEEE It is offered as a basis for discussion and is not binding on the contributing individual(s) or organization(s). The material in this document is subject to change in form and content after further study. The contributor(s) reserve(s) the right to add, amend or withdraw material contained herein. Release: The contributor grants a free, irrevocable license to the IEEE to incorporate material contained in this contribution, and any modifications thereof, in the creation of an IEEE Standards publication; to copyright in the IEEE’s name any IEEE Standards publication even though it may include portions of this contribution; and at the IEEE’s sole discretion to permit others to reproduce in whole or in part the resulting IEEE Standards publication. The contributor also acknowledges and accepts that this contribution may be made public by IEEE Patent Policy and Procedures: The contributor is familiar with the IEEE 802 Patent Policy and Procedures < ieee802.org/guides/bylaws/sb-bylaws.pdf>, including the statement "IEEE standards may include the known use of patent(s), including patent applications, provided the IEEE receives assurance from the patent holder or applicant with respect to patents essential for compliance with both mandatory and optional portions of the standard." Early disclosure to the Working Group of patent information that might be relevant to the standard is essential to reduce the possibility for delays in the development process and increase the likelihood that the draft publication will be approved for publication. Please notify the Chair as early as possible, in written or electronic form, if patented technology (or technology under patent application) might be incorporated into a draft standard being developed within the IEEE Working Group. If you have questions, contact the IEEE Patent Committee Administrator at Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor Stuart J. Kerry NXP Semiconductor
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General Agenda Information
March 2007 doc.: IEEE /0340r0 March 2007 IEEE 802 Wireless Groups General Agenda Information Caribe Royale Orlando Florida Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor 1 Stuart J. Kerry NXP Semiconductor
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Working Group Officer Duties
March 2007 doc.: IEEE /0340r0 March 2007 Working Group Officer Duties Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor 11 Stuart J. Kerry NXP Semiconductor
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Caribe Royal – Orlando Florida
March 2007 doc.: IEEE /0340r0 March 2007 Voting Tokens Once you become a Voter, a Voting “token” will be printed for each session and can be obtained at the opening of a session, providing you have paid your attendance fee! Display session Badge at ALL times If you loose your Voting token during a session please see Harry Worstell –ViceChair for a replacement in Voters are required to use this “token” when a vote in progress on a Motion. Registration badges are Voting Tokens for Your Name 007 Acrobat Document VM .11 Caribe Royal – Orlando Florida Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor Stuart J. Kerry NXP Semiconductor
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Operating Policies and Procedures
March 2007 doc.: IEEE /0340r0 March 2007 Operating Policies and Procedures Operating Policies and Procedures in order of priority IEEE Project 802 LMSC Policies and Procedures LMSC_P&P_November_2005_R doc Revised January 4, 2006 IEEE Working Group Policies and Procedures Document IEEE Robert’s Rules of Order Latest Edition Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor 11 Stuart J. Kerry NXP Semiconductor
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March 2007 WG Voting Rights Earned by attending and participating in meetings for each session in progress. Two (2) types of meeting sessions Plenary:….3 sessions per calendar year (March, July, November) Organized by IEEE 802 Interim: .. Currently 3 sessions per calendar year (January, May, September) Organized by working group IEEE /15/18/19/22 and sponsored by a host Voting rights can be earned by participation in 2 of the last 4 consecutive plenary sessions or 1 plenary and 1 interim. When you reach “Nearly Voter” status, you must submit a letter of intent requesting voting rights to the WG Chair and coping the WG Vice-Chair by 14 days prior to the next plenary session to be granted voting rights at that next session. Voting rights are only granted in “Plenary Sessions”. Definition of participation….. Must be present in at least 75% of ALL meetings in a session and voters attending and will receive voting credit for maintaining voting rights in or : (primary WG) Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor
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WG Voting Rights Must be present at a session to VOTE
March 2007 WG Voting Rights IEEE Working Group (WG) Plenary Meetings Task Groups (TG) Meetings Must be present at a session to VOTE Participation in debates, Motion(s) moved, seconded is only permitted by VOTING members in ALL /15/ meetings However WG & TG Chairs may permit observers/attendees to participate in debates and discussions…. Study Groups (SG) Meetings In Study Groups ALL attendees and have VOTING rights For more details Refer to doc: New Participants-Orientation Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor
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Registration and Media Recording
March 2007 doc.: IEEE /0340r0 March 2007 Registration and Media Recording Each Attendee must provide contact information and pay conference fee Conference fee has to be paid through the registration desk / hotel or sponsor Failure to pay conference fee results in loss of credit for voting rights Photography not permitted unless approved by WG Chair Audio taping of IEEE /.22 meetings is NOT allowed Media – Press and Analyst briefings Only the /.15/ WG Chair and WG Vice-Chairs are allowed to give verbal statements/interviews to the media on behalf of the respective IEEE /.15/ working groups Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor 17 Stuart J. Kerry NXP Semiconductor
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802server.events.ieee.org 172.16.0.11 /var/ftp/11
March 2007 802server.events.ieee.org /var/ftp/11 Use this address whenever possible For local server Obtain Doc numbers Upload Docs File synchronization to local FTP site will be handled periodically throughout the day Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor
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Reflector Request March 2007 http://www.ieee802.org/11
Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor
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Reflector Request..cont.
March 2007 Reflector Request..cont. Scroll down Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor
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Reflector Request…cont
March 2007 Reflector Request…cont Scroll down Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor
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Reflector Request…cont
March 2007 Reflector Request…cont Scroll down Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor
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Attendance list Attendance list is provided in WG session minutes
March 2007 doc.: IEEE /0340r0 Attendance list March 2007 Attendance list is provided in WG session minutes ALL Attendees are responsible for providing correct addresses and contact information to the follow officers in addition to updates on the Electronic Attendance Server For changes to Harry Worstell Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor 16 Stuart J. Kerry NXP Semiconductor
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Declaration of Affiliation
March 2007 Declaration of Affiliation Revision: Feb 2006 Standards Board Bylaw Openness Openness is defined as the quality of being not restricted to a particular type or category of participants. All meetings involving standards development an all IEEE Sponsor ballots shall be open toa all interested parties. Each individual participant in IEEE Standards activities shall disclose his or her affiliations when requested. A person who knows or reasonably should know, that a participant’s disclosure is materially incomplete or incorrect should report that fact to the Secretary of the IEEE-SA Standards Board and the appropriate Sponsors. Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor
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Reference - http://standards.ieee.org/guides/bylaws/sect6-7.html#6
March 2007 Reference - Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor
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March 2007 Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor
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Membership & Anti-Trust
March 2007 doc.: IEEE /0340r0 March 2007 Membership & Anti-Trust Individual membership In all IEEE standards meetings, membership is by individual, hence you do not represent a company or organization. Anti-Trust laws The Anti-Trust laws forbid the discussion of prices within our meetings. Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor 26 Stuart J. Kerry NXP Semiconductor
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March 2007 doc.: IEEE /0340r0 March 2007 Copyright Under the current US copyright law — the author of information is deemed to own the copyright from the moment of creation The IEEE Bylaws require copyright of all material to be held by the IEEE Must consult with IEEE for re-use of copyright material The IEEE Standards accomplishes transfer of copyright ownership through the Project Authorization Request (PAR) process The Copyright Act of 1976 made a dramatic change to U.S. copyright law. Copyright was now deemed to exist from the moment of creation. Thus anything that is created is deemed to be owned by its creator. Additionally, a work no longer needs to be published in order to be protected. Therefore, even your scribbles on a piece of note paper constitute copyrighted material that you own and control. The NII (National Information Infrastructure) and the GII (Global Information Infrastructure) are causing lawmakers and copyright owners to assess the ability of current copyright law to protect owners rights in a digital environment. While at this point the changes being talked about are not significant, they will make it clear that copyright protection is afforded to owners in the digital environment making it a requirement to honor the rights accorded to owners. It is a requirement under the IEEE Bylaws that copyright ownership of all material published by the IEEE resides with the IEEE. The Standards Department accomplishes the transfer of copyright ownership from the volunteer authors to the Institute via the Project Authorization Request (PAR) form. Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor Stuart J. Kerry NXP Semiconductor
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Standards Compliance Disclaimer
March 2007 Standards Compliance Disclaimer IEEE 802 “Unapproved Drafts” are to be used for the purposes of IEEE Standardization activities IEEE 802 “Unapproved Drafts” must NOT be used to claim conformance/compliance, as Drafts are subject to change You are at RISK if IEEE 802 “Unapproved Drafts” are USED for anything other that IEEE Standardization activities Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor
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IEEE 802.11 Meeting Etiquette
March 2007 doc.: IEEE /0340r0 March 2007 IEEE Meeting Etiquette IEEE 802 is a world-wide professional technical organization Meetings are to be conducted in an orderly and professional manner in accordance with the policies and procedures governed by the organization. Individuals are to address the “Technical” content of the subject under consideration and refrain from making “personal” comments to or about the presenter. The Copyright Act of 1976 made a dramatic change to U.S. copyright law. Copyright was now deemed to exist from the moment of creation. Thus anything that is created is deemed to be owned by its creator. Additionally, a work no longer needs to be published in order to be protected. Therefore, even your scribbles on a piece of note paper constitute copyrighted material that you own and control. The NII (National Information Infrastructure) and the GII (Global Information Infrastructure) are causing lawmakers and copyright owners to assess the ability of current copyright law to protect owners rights in a digital environment. While at this point the changes being talked about are not significant, they will make it clear that copyright protection is afforded to owners in the digital environment making it a requirement to honor the rights accorded to owners. It is a requirement under the IEEE Bylaws that copyright ownership of all material published by the IEEE resides with the IEEE. The Standards Department accomplishes the transfer of copyright ownership from the volunteer authors to the Institute via the Project Authorization Request (PAR) form. Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor Stuart J. Kerry NXP Semiconductor
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Meeting Room Projector Notice to the Chairs
March 2007 Meeting Room Projector Notice to the Chairs newton.events.ieee.org/av Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor
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Thank you for your attention! Questions?
March 2007 doc.: IEEE /0340r0 March 2007 Thank you for your attention! Questions? The Copyright Act of 1976 made a dramatic change to U.S. copyright law. Copyright was now deemed to exist from the moment of creation. Thus anything that is created is deemed to be owned by its creator. Additionally, a work no longer needs to be published in order to be protected. Therefore, even your scribbles on a piece of note paper constitute copyrighted material that you own and control. The NII (National Information Infrastructure) and the GII (Global Information Infrastructure) are causing lawmakers and copyright owners to assess the ability of current copyright law to protect owners rights in a digital environment. While at this point the changes being talked about are not significant, they will make it clear that copyright protection is afforded to owners in the digital environment making it a requirement to honor the rights accorded to owners. It is a requirement under the IEEE Bylaws that copyright ownership of all material published by the IEEE resides with the IEEE. The Standards Department accomplishes the transfer of copyright ownership from the volunteer authors to the Institute via the Project Authorization Request (PAR) form. Stuart J. Kerry, NXP Semiconductor Stuart J. Kerry NXP Semiconductor
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