As of 2010, current standards documents from VESA cost hundreds, or thousands, of dollars each.
Each release incorporates hundreds of individual standards documents, each of which may have been through many revisions.
There are several current definitions of UTF-8 in various standards documents:
Beginning with release 1.7, a single standards document was released by a UnifiedPOS committee.
That standards document is then used to create the common JavaPOS libraries for the release.
If we're ever going to progress beyond writing standards documents, we've got to demonstrate a danger to these people.
They are not defined in this way though, being defined by tables of values, with tolerances, in the standards documents, thus allowing different realisations:
The objective of these standards documents is to establish a foundation of performance and behavior that all digital signage systems can follow.
In general, we have considered techspeak any term that communicates primarily by a denotation well established in textbooks, technical dictionaries, or standards documents.
Although these definitions consume only one of the 468 pages in the standards documents, a disproportionate amount of attention is paid to them.