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January 3, 2019
The history of standards for data and file exchange formats in the language industry goes back to the Localization Industry Standards Association (LISA) in the 1990s, which spearheaded the efforts around TBX, TMX, and GMX. The Organization for the Advancement of Structured Information Standards (OASIS) organized the DITA, ebXML, XLIFF, and many other business data exchange standards. Linport is yet another initiative for localization data exchange. Most recently, GALA has been coordinating a new push called Translation API Cases & Classes (TAPICC). This latest effort is currently a pre-standards initiative, with participation from a range of industry contributors, to build industry-consensus agreements on metadata, use cases, best practices, and API classes.
Coordinating the interests and efforts of otherwise competing industry players and getting to meaningful results that enable continued innovation can be a challenge. In some cases, the core technology that underlies business application development changes faster than agreements can form around standards. Some question whether standards even matter, as they appear to be a lagging indicator. Why should industry participants care enough to put energy into developing them?
CSA Research sees the following reasons to get involved:
For continuous localization, the TAPICC initiative also seeks to support string-based content flows, in addition to file-based processing. String-based exchange allows systems to pass translation units or segments between tools and microservices without the overhead of files. A consensus on this topic would patch an important hole in the standards coverage to date. CSA Research recommends that enterprises, LSPs, and software firms alike should stay involved or informed as the TAPICC initiative progresses.
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