The one protocol that everyone would adhere to - both for communications within a company and transmissions to other companies - is an international standard called X.400.
Both groups were trying to form a unified standard called Ultrawide Band, but recently agreed to go their separate ways.
In 2007, US alarm manufacturers developed an open standard called DC-09.
That standard - called "more likely than not" in tax jargon - is a pretty generous one.
Although the procedure is quite heuristic, a proposed standard called Agora outlines the strategy for choosing neighboring elements to append.
In 1964, the two acts joined forces for a collection of Spanish-language standards called Amor.
Other standards, called "protocols" define the behavior of these devices.
Dissatisfaction with these standards led to a more accurate standard for wheels and track, called Proto:48.
V.42bis also supplants an earlier standard, called MNP level 5.
C++11, current standard for the C++ programming language; previously called "C++0x"