salutation http://salutation.org The Salutation Consortium is a non-profit corporation that promotes and distributes,royalty-free and via open source, the Salutation Architecture Sat, 21 Jul 2012 06:09:24 +0000 en hourly 1 http://wordpress.org/?v=3.3.1 Whitepapers List http://salutation.org/whitepapers-list/ http://salutation.org/whitepapers-list/#comments Sun, 13 May 2012 13:14:09 +0000 admin http://salutation.org/?p=269

Geographic computing

Bluetoth mapping

Salutation Architecture and the newly defined service discovery protocols from Microsoft and SUN.

Salutation Consortium Operation Outline

Salutation Architecture Overview 

Salutation Architecture Supports Faxing

Salutation Lite

Market Trends and Salutation Opportunities Review

Salutation Information Management Service Structure and Product Component Review

Salutation Architecture – Enabling Application and Services

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NEW STUDY POINTS OUT NEED FOR WIRELESS PRINTING SOLUTIONS http://salutation.org/new-study-points-out-need-for-wireless-printing-solutions/ http://salutation.org/new-study-points-out-need-for-wireless-printing-solutions/#comments Sun, 13 May 2012 13:00:32 +0000 admin2 http://salutation.org/?p=143

Three-fourths of Respondents Indicate Need or Desire to Print Directly from Laptop or PDA  
HIGHLAND, UT, October 16, 2000— Users of handheld organizers, palm size computers, laptops and advanced mobile phones want to print directly from these devices, according to a new preliminary study sponsored by The Salutation Consortium, a non-profit corporation focused on providing technologies that improve information exchange among portable computing devices .

 

More than 300 mobile device users were contacted via telephone poll by independent market research firm, Strategic Alternatives of Florida.   Respondents were asked a series of questions regarding their mobile device usage and printing needs.

 

Of these more than 300 mobile device users surveyed, 75 percent or 225 people said they wanted an easy to use printing capability from their devices.

 

“What we have is a growing population that sees mobile as a way of life,said Robert Pascoe, president of the Consortium.   “As manufactures of these devices and software developers, we need to create the walkup and print tools necessary to make this a reality.   Service discovery software, the ability to find and communicate with different end devices, plays an invaluable role in solving this need. ”

 

Additional findings include 75 percent of the laptop users wanting a wireless printing solution.   Handheld organizer users want a wireless printing solution 46 percent of the time.   In addition, 36 percent of mobile device users wanted business centers such as those found in airports and hotels to provide walk up and use wireless printing.

 

IBM, a charter member of the Consortium, agrees with the need to continue research into the printing requirements and demands of mobile device users.

 

NEED FOR WIRELESS PRINTING SOLUTIONS    

“Walk-up and print is yet another of the many new services that mobile device users want and need.   We support The Salutation Consortium in its efforts to advance the technological requirements to make this a reality, said Brent Miller, Senior Programmer, for IBM’s Pervasive Computing Division.

 

The Salutation Consortium understands that the study is preliminary and suggests more extensive research be conducted to further validate the findings.   Visitors to the Consortium’s web site ( www.salutation.org ) are welcome and encouraged to download the study’s findings. In addition, the Consortium considers the research ongoing and is asking all those interested to access the survey from the site and provide their responses.

 

As an incentive to responding to the survey, the Consortium will be giving away a WinCE Organizer with a color screen to a randomly selected survey respondent.

 

About the Salutation Consortium 

The Salutation Consortium is a non-profit corporation that promotes and distributes, royalty-free and via open source, the Salutation Architecture, a service discovery and session management protocol developed and sponsored by leading information technology companies such as IBM.   The Salutation Architecture is independent of operating system, communications protocol or hardware platform.   It provides information exchange among and between different wireless handheld devices and office automation equipment.

 

IBM is a charter member of the Consortium. President of the Consortium, Robert Pascoe, is an employee of IBM whose job is to steer the Salutation organization.

 

In addition to IBM, member companies include America   Online, Axis Communications, Canon Inc., Consumer Electronics Association (CEA), Continental Automated Buildings Association (CABA), Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd., Fujitsu Limited,       Infrared Data Association (IrDA), Konica Corporation, Kyocera Mita Corporation, Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd., MBurst, Inc., Murata Machinery, Ltd., National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), Oki Data Corporation., Ricoh Company, Ltd., Seiko Epson Corp., Square, Toshiba TEC Corporation, USA Technologies, Inc.

 

Academic members include Dr. Tamel Bose, Dr. Roger Debry, Marcus Giese, Kaspar Helldén, Professor Alan Leong, Professor Wenching Liou, Dr. Steven Reiss, Dr. Golden G. Richard III, Daniel Stevenson, Sudakshina Sharma Sarkar, Dr. Tomohiro Takagi, Heath Westover, Young Bok Yoon.

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IBM Announces Availability of NuOffice Office System Software for Lotus Notes Domino Based on Salutation Canon, Ricoh, Muratec announce NuOffice peripherals http://salutation.org/ibm-announces-availability-of-nuoffice-office-system-software-for-lotus-notes-domino-based-on-salutation-canon-ricoh-muratec-announce-nuoffice-peripherals/ http://salutation.org/ibm-announces-availability-of-nuoffice-office-system-software-for-lotus-notes-domino-based-on-salutation-canon-ricoh-muratec-announce-nuoffice-peripherals/#comments Sun, 13 May 2012 12:57:56 +0000 admin2 http://salutation.org/?p=190

ATLANTA, GEORGIA, April 13, 1999 . . . IBM today announced the North American availability of NuOffice, a networked office system based on Lotus Notes Domino that simplifies the transfer of data to and from office equipment.

In addition, the company announced that three major manufacturers—Ricoh, Canon, and Muratec— will ship multifunction peripherals that support the NuOffice system.

NuOffice and its supporting peripherals adhere to the Salutation Architecture, open middleware technology for locating and controlling equipment across the Internet or a company intranet. Once a device has been located, Salutation can facilitate the attachment of the proper device drivers.

With NuOffice, Lotus Notes users can print, fax or scan information to any Salutation-compliant peripheral and the software automatically senses the configuration and loads the necessary drivers. NuOffice peripherals can be locally or remotely attached to the Lotus Notes Domino Server

Mark Bregman, IBM General Manager of Pervasive Computing said, “NuOffice is an ideal solution for large corporate offices and workgroups that transforms ordinary office equipment into intelligent devices on the network. Today’s announcement is also a significant endorsement of the Salutation Architecture. Broad support of this open standard increases the number of devices NuOffice can access.”

IBM NuOffice is a successful product in Japan, along with a family of supporting NuOffice peripherals and softwares from Canon, Fuji Xerox, Mita, Muratec and Ricoh.

A NuOffice user can email a scanned document directly from a fax machine or copier, or scan documents directly into a Notes Data Base. From there the scanned image may be forwarded or routed. Additionally, NuOffice can input to application processes, such as OCR. Incoming faxes and scanned images can be stored in individual mailboxes or in a specific database, allowing the mobile worker to share information with the office. When printing, end users with NuOffice can easily query devices for functions, options, and availability.

In addition, NuOffice automatically manages the task of upgrading, reconfiguring, and removing equipment on the network . NuOffice can discover Salutation equipment locally or remotely. If the equipment can attach to the NuOffice server through a LAN, WAN or Internet, it can reap the benefits of NuOffice. NuOffice provides an interface between the Salutation-enabled devices and the Notes Data Base. This provides simple integration of network peripherals with existing vertical applications that monitor Notes Data Base content.

IBM’s NuOffice will be available in June ’99. Newly compatible Ricoh products include the RICOH Aficio 350/450 digital imaging systems, the AP Series digital black & white and color digital printers. The Ricoh/IBM NuOffice supported products will be available in early 3Q99. Canon intends to make its Image Platform (IP) devices enabled with Salutation Architecture and IBM NuOffice software available in 4Q99. In addition, Murata (Muratec)’s Salutation Fax Server System, including the F-120 fax server and SM-100 server software will be available in June ’99.

IBM is the world’s largest information technology company, with 80 years of leadership in helping businesses innovate. IBM’s Pervasive Computing unit has responsibility for creating e-business solutions that leverage the new class of connected client devices such as handheld Internet appliances and screenphones. A key part of the team’s mission is furthering the adoption of open industry standards for pervasive computing to help customers easily access and act on information whenever and wherever they may be. IBM can be found on the Web at http://www.ibm.com.

About the Salutation Consortium

The Salutation Consortium is a non-profit corporation focused on providing technologies to improve information interchange, with member organizations in the United States, Europe, and Japan. Member companies include Adobe Systems, Inc., Advanced Peripherals Technologies, Axis Communications, Brother Industries Ltd.,Canon Inc.,Cisco Systems, Inc., Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd., Fujitsu Limited, Granite Systems, Hewlett-Packard Corp., Hitachi, Ltd., IBM, Kobe Steel, Ltd., Komatsu, Inc., Konica Corp., Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., Ltd., Mita Industrial Co., Ltd., Mitsubishi Electric Corp., Murata Machinery, Ltd., Oki Data Corp., Ricoh Company, Ltd., Sanyo Electric Co., Ltd., Seiko Epson Corp., Sun Microsystems, Inc., Sharp Corporation, Toshiba Corporation, Xerox Corporation.

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HP AND SALUTATION CONSORTIUM TO COLLABORATE ON INTEGRATING JETSEND TECHNOLOGY http://salutation.org/hp-and-salutation-consortium-to-collaborate-on-integrating-jetsend-technology/ http://salutation.org/hp-and-salutation-consortium-to-collaborate-on-integrating-jetsend-technology/#comments Sun, 13 May 2012 12:57:37 +0000 admin2 http://salutation.org/?p=119

SAN JOSE, Calif., July 21, 1997 – The Salutation Consortium today announced that it is working with Hewlett-Packard Company, a member of the Consortium, on ways to support HP’s newly announced JetSend technology in the Salutation Architecture.

“We are identifying areas where integration of the two technologies will enhance user benefits,” said Robert J. Horton, Alliance Marketing Manager, HP Information Appliance Operation. “Users will be well served when these two technologies supplement and complement one another.”

“One of the early members of the Consortium, HP has demonstrated its commitment to developing technology that will simplify communications between a broad range of information appliances. JetSend is a major contribution to moving this vision forward,” said Robert F. Pecora, managing director of the Consortium.

Comparison of JetSend and Salutation

Salutation and JetSend are based on the common vision of enabling different types of equipment, including computers, office equipment, and home devices to interoperate. The Salutation Architecture sends a network query to determine the characteristics of a device, application or service, allowing fullest possible use of the characteristics discovered. JetSend is a device-to-device protocol that allows two devices to connect, negotiate data types, provide status updates, and exchange information. In enabled devices, both JetSend and Salutation work without user intervention.

Both approaches fit into today’s computing environment.

The Salutation Architecture supports a process to determine and make full use of unique features of a connected information appliance. For example, Salutation provides benefits in a directory centric environment. A directory service can maintain detailed information about connected appliances and assure that each device operates to its fullest capacity.

JetSend’s device-to-device protocol provides benefits where a directory-centric model does not apply. JetSend ensures that two information appliances can share one of a set of data types and allows the appliances to select the capabilities that will provide the highest available level of information exchange. In this way, JetSend ensures communication can take place between the devices.

Steps Toward Integration

As a first step toward providing users with an integrated approach, the Consortium, with HP’s assistance, will investigate adding a JetSend Functional Unit to the Salutation Architecture. The JetSend Functional Unit would allow a user to utilize the Salutation APIs and protocols to determine to the “JetSend capabilities” of an information appliance and adjust interactions based on the response. The Consortium will also investigate other approaches to integrating the two technologies. An initial checkpoint is scheduled for the Salutation Technical Subcommittee meeting in October.

About the Consortium

The Salutation Consortium has published an open specification that enables an application to locate a particular resource on a network through a broadcast query. The specification is independent of network transport, hardware platform, and operating system software and supports standard Internet and other message formats.

The Salutation Consortium is a non-profit corporation with member organizations in the United States, Europe, and Japan. Member companies include APTi, Axis Communications, Brother, Canon, Casio, Cisco, Eastman Kodak, Fuji Xerox, Fujitsu, Hewlett Packard, Hitachi, Integrated Systems, IBM, Iwatsu, Justsystem, Kobe Steel, Komatsu, Konica, Lexmark, Matsushita, Microware Systems, Minolta, Mita, Mitsubishi, Murata (Muratec), Novell, Oki Data, Ricoh, Rios Systems, Sanyo, Seiko Epson, Sharp, Sun Microsystems, Toshiba, WhetStone, and Xerox.

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HITACHI SEIBU SOFTWARE, RICOH, SONY INTRODUCE SUITE OF SALUTATION PRODUCTS FOR DOCUMENT MANAGEMENT OVER A NETWORK http://salutation.org/hitachi-seibu-software-ricoh-sony-introduce-suite-of-salutation-products-for-document-management-over-a-network/ http://salutation.org/hitachi-seibu-software-ricoh-sony-introduce-suite-of-salutation-products-for-document-management-over-a-network/#comments Sun, 13 May 2012 12:57:02 +0000 admin2 http://salutation.org/?p=133

Sony Support for Salutation First from Outside Consortium

SAN JOSE, Calif., February 24, 1998—Hitachi Seibu Software, Ricoh, and Sony have introduced a new suite of network document management software and supporting office peripherals using Salutation technology to simplify network interoperability, said Robert F. Pecora, managing director of the Salutation Consortium. Salutation is open middleware technology for locating and controlling equipment across the Internet or a company intranet.

The products increase support for IBM’s NuOffice document management software in the Japanese market, where it already boasts a family of supporting peripherals and software from Canon, Fuji Xerox, Mita, Muratec, and Ricoh. Several vendors have announced NuOffice products for availability in the US market later this year. NuOffice, based on Lotus Notes, provides a complete office system for large customer sites with many mobile or telecommuting users.

“Sony’s Salutation-enabled product is the first from a major vendor who is not a member of the Salutation Consortium,” said Pecora. “Consortium members set their goal to develop an architecture that would attract wide industry support, and to make that technology available without cost and license fees to all developers.”

Hitachi Seibu Software Millemasse Salutation Gateway

Hitachi Seibu Software’s Millemasse Salutation Gateway automatically registers scanned image data and fax images to a Lotus Notes database via NuOffice. The image data itself is registered to the Millemasse/FS server, and only document management information for the image is registered to the Notes database, reducing the capacity required on the Notes database.

Ricoh RGO Salutation Software

Ricoh Co. Ltd. released RGO Salutation Software for Ricoh’s existing family of Salutation-enabled digital multifunction peripherals (MFPs) and laser printers. RGO software, residing on a server along with IBM’s NuOffice, enables the Ricoh peripherals to serve in a network in the Notes groupware environment. Notes users can scan an image from an MFP directly into a Notes client and save the image in a database. Early versions of RGO supported more than 37,800 Lotus Notes users at Ricoh.

Additional software from Rios Systems, a company jointly owned by Ricoh and IBM Japan, enables Notes users to send and receive Notes documents via fax. Fax documents can be received as images into a Notes database, as well.

Sony i-file and WebDoc

Sony Corp. introduced i-file and WebDoc, which together handle the total document life cycle of both conventional paper documents and network-accessible files. The new products integrate document management with groupware, workflow, databases, and MFPs from several vendors to make documents more accessible from the device at hand.

For example, a document can be scanned by a copier or a fax machine for direct input to an i-file server, and in reverse, an i-file document can be printed on a copier or fax, in addition to a conventional printer.

WebDoc uses the web on an extended intranet. WebDoc can register a paper document to a home page and display it merely by scanning it into i-file, with no manual HTML translation required.

About the Consortium

The Salutation Consortium is a non-profit corporation with member organizations in the United States, Europe, and Japan. Member companies include Adobe Systems, APTi, Axis Communications, Brother, Canon, Cisco, Fuji Xerox, Fujitsu, Granite Systems, Hewlett Packard, Hitachi, IBM, Kobe Steel, Komatsu, Konica, Matsushita, Mita, Mitsubishi, Murata (Muratec), Okamura, Oki Data, Ricoh, Sanyo, Seiko Epson, Sharp, Sun Microsystems, Toshiba, and Xerox.

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FAX INDUSTRY LEADERS MEET TO EXPLORE OPPORTUNITIES FOR DEVELOPING NETWORK APPLICATIONS USING SALUTATION ARCHITECTURE http://salutation.org/fax-industry-leaders-meet-to-explore-opportunities-for-developing-network-applications-using-salutation-architecture/ http://salutation.org/fax-industry-leaders-meet-to-explore-opportunities-for-developing-network-applications-using-salutation-architecture/#comments Sun, 13 May 2012 12:56:48 +0000 admin2 http://salutation.org/?p=139

SAN JOSE, Calif., Apr. 20, 1998–Participants in “The Impact of Salutation on Tomorrow’s Fax Applications,” a two-day workshop sponsored by the Salutation Consortium, heard manufacturers of fax devices, fax servers, and multifunction devices detail progress in applying Salutation technology to distributed printing, image capture and transmission, and Internet fax.

Twenty-three attendees representing 16 companies saw demonstrations of Salutation products and development tools from IBM Japan, Mita, Muratec, STS Consulting, and XtraWorX, LLC. Keynote speaker was Pete Davidson, Davidson Consulting, affiliated with International Data Corp. and Buyer’s Laboratory. Davidson, editor and publisher of FaxWire, said, “There is a definite need for Salutation and nothing else is in this space. Salutation is a good answer for solving some very real needs. Without Salutation there will be less market for vendors to share.”

The Salutation Architecture is open middleware technology for locating and controlling fax machines, printers, copiers, and other computer equipment across the Internet or a company intranet. It lets you query the network to discover which devices attached can receive your images, files, and messages. For example, a laptop computer can locate a color printer, or a digital camera can send an image directly to a fax machine. Salutation reduces LAN administration by autoregistering new devices on the network and by supporting ad hoc discovery, with no need for maintaining enterprise-wide directories.

Workshop participants pointed out in discussion that Salutation fax functions support Inbound Routing, Receipt Notification and Read Confirmation over G3 fax protocol, all key features for developing new fax applications.

Edgar M. Tompkins, Mita marketing manager for the Integrated Document Imaging Division briefed attendees on Mita’s Salutation fax machines now available in Japan. “Salutation enables users to fax directly to an email address, without intermediate scanning steps. A recipient can retrieve an image via email from a remote location. Customers are pleased with their ability to support mobile workers with convenient, secure access to information,” said Tompkins. The Mita fax is marketed in conjunction with IBM Japan’s Salutation extensions to the Lotus Notes office system. According to Tompkins, the company is looking to expand the platforms supported and plans to launch the product in the US.

The Muratec fax with Salutation, demonstrated to workshop participants, is also marketed in Japan with NuOffice, the IBM Japan Salutation extensions to Lotus Notes. NuOffice provides a complete office system for large customer sites with many mobile or telecommuting users. The Salutation extensions to Lotus Notes enable users to send fax and email messages to the device most convenient to the recipient.

Salutation development tools demonstrated were XtraWorX LLC’s Port of Entry and STS Consulting’s Salutation API Driver, both now in beta test. Port of Entry bridges legacy desktops and peripherals to Salutation and presents a consistent access format for network peripherals. The API Driver graphically builds API calls on Windows, teaches programmers the Salutation interface, and demonstrates API call attributes and responses.

Manufacturers of fax server products led discussions about the need for security and standards in the network environment. Salutation Consortium managing director Robert F. Pecora stated that “Salutation is a thin layer to integrate existing standards and deliver additional user capabilities.” Global Village Communication director of engineering Steve Urvan added, “We’re interested in how the Salutation vision of standardized APIs for capability discovery could extend the potential for our LAN fax server.”

According to many participants, the growing market for color output devices, both printers and fax, will make the Salutation discovery capability very attractive to users. “The sender will be able to know in advance if a receiving device can print in color. Sometimes it’s not enough to send a fax–you want to send a color document,” Pecora said.

Salutation Consortium

The Salutation Consortium is a non-profit corporation with member organizations in the United States, Europe, and Japan. Member companies include Adobe Systems, APTi, Axis Communications, Brother, Canon, Cisco, Eastman Kodak, Fuji Xerox, Fujitsu, Hewlett Packard, Hitachi, Integrated Systems, IBM, Kobe Steel, Komatsu, Konica, Lexmark, Matsushita, Microware Systems, Minolta, Mita, Mitsubishi, Murata (Muratec), Novell, Okamura, Oki Data, Ricoh, Rios Systems, Sanyo, Seiko Epson, Sharp, Sun Microsystems, Toshiba, and Xerox.

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SALUTATION CONSORTIUM AND BLUETOOTH TEAM UP ON CONSISTENT SERVICE DISCOVERY http://salutation.org/salutation-consortium-and-bluetooth-team-up-on-consistent-service-discovery/ http://salutation.org/salutation-consortium-and-bluetooth-team-up-on-consistent-service-discovery/#comments Sun, 13 May 2012 12:55:41 +0000 admin2 http://salutation.org/?p=157

HIGHLAND, UT, August 2, 1999—The Salutation Consortium, a non-profit corporation focused on providing technologies that improve information interchange, announced an ongoing effort with the Bluetooth Special Interest Group.

The goal of this cooperative effort is to converge the two groups’ service discovery technologies to create a single implementation, making it easier for software developers to write one applications that works in both environments.

The Salutation Consortium has been providing counsel and guidance to the Service Directory taskforce of the Bluetooth SIG’s Software Working Group.

“We are committed to providing a single service discovery technology across communication protocols,” said Robert Pascoe, president of The Salutation Consortium. “Working with Bluetooth enables us to exchange technical requirements and understand business needs in order to provide a universal language for the exchange of information.”

“We are fortunate to have The Consortium’s expertise in our combined work effort,” said Brent Miller, chair of the Bluetooth Service Discovery subcommittee and a senior software engineer in IBM’s Pervasive Computing Technology group. “Their in-depth knowledge and cooperation accelerated the process of demonstrating how to use Salutation technologies in the Bluetooth communications stack.”

A white paper on the topic co-authored by the two groups is available at /whitepaper/BtoothMapping.PDF.

Salutation technology is independent of operating system and communication protocol. This provides for a single-service discovery implementation across devices, applications and services.

The Salutation Consortium is also developing a Salutation “Lite” implementation for Bluetooth and the Infrared Data Association (IrDA), enabling developers to write one common API for both environments.

The Salutation Consortium is a non-profit corporation that promotes and distributes, royalty-free, the Salutation Architecture, a dervice discovery and session management protocol developed by leading information technology companies. It is an open standard independent of operating system, communications protocol or hardware platform.

Member companies include Advanced Peripheral Technologies, Axis Communications, Canon, Fuji Xerox, Ltd., Fujitsu Limited, Granite Systems, Hewlett Packard, Hitachi, IBM, Konica, Matsushita Electric Industrial co. Mita Industrial Co., Mitsubishi Electric Corp., Murata Machinery, Ltd., Oki Data Corp., Ricoh Company, Seiko Epson Corp., Sharp Corporation, Toshiba Corp., Xerox Corp.

Information about the salutation Architecture is available at http://.

The Bluetooth SIG is an industry group consisting of leading companies in the telecommunication and computing industries that are developing an open specification for wireless communication of data and voice. It is based on low-cost, short-range radio link, built into a 9x9mm integrated circuit, facilitating protected ad hoc connections for

stationary and mobile communications environments. The SIG is sponsored by Ericsson Mobile Communications AB, IBM, Intel, Nokia Mobile Phones and Toshiba.

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SALUTATION ARCHITECTURE GOES LITE TO SUPPORT INTEROPERABILITY FOR MOBILE AND HANDHELD DEVICES http://salutation.org/salutation-architecture-goes-lite-to-support-interoperability-for-mobile-and-handheld-devices/ http://salutation.org/salutation-architecture-goes-lite-to-support-interoperability-for-mobile-and-handheld-devices/#comments Sun, 13 May 2012 12:55:32 +0000 admin2 http://salutation.org/?p=173

DENVER, Colo., June 7, 1999—The Salutation Consortium today previewed an open architecture for capability discovery and information sharing aimed at developers of mobile devices with limited bandwidth and battery-based power constraints. The preview took place at the Windows CE Developers Conference, which opened today.

Salutation previewed the prototype Salutation Manager Lite (SLM Lite) architecture at the conference in order to obtain feedback from WinCE developers and confirm that the prototype meets all developer requirements. “Hand held and palm-size WinCE computers with IrDA infrared communications links are a perfect environment for SLM Lite,” said Robert Pascoe, technical consultant to the consortium. “This new generation of devices needs to be able to share information with a broad range of computers and peripherals. Salutation is independent of operating systems, so SLM Lite will be portable to other versions of WinCE, Palm OS, and Java. Since Salutation has no networking protocol prerequisites, SLM Lite will support TCP/IP and Bluetooth, as well.”

The Salutation Architecture was originated by leading information technology companies who foresaw the need for an open, standard way for locating and controlling equipment across networks. Key to the process, Salutation enables a device to search for a capability (such as operating environment and display characteristics) and once a device has been located, Salutation facilitates the attachment of the proper device drivers and data transforms, allowing maximum possible use of the device and its capabilities.

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SALUTATION CONSORTIUM NAMES ROBERT F. PECORA MANAGING DIRECTOR http://salutation.org/salutation-consortium-names-robert-f-pecora-managing-director/ http://salutation.org/salutation-consortium-names-robert-f-pecora-managing-director/#comments Sun, 13 May 2012 12:54:02 +0000 admin2 http://salutation.org/?p=115

SAN JOSE, Calif., May 19, 1997: Richard J. Osterman, president of the Salutation Consortium, announced that the industry association has named Robert F. Pecora to be managing director. Pecora is responsible for Consortium marketing and member recruiting activities in North America and Europe.

Pecora was employed by IBM for more than 30 years in marketing positions related to office systems, application enabling software and other areas. OBob PecoraOs marketing background in application software and office technology is an excellent fit for the ConsortiumOs charter in 1997. Pecora will help the Consortium and its members educate the market about the opportunities we offer vendors who are creating products and services for tomorrowOs networks,O said Osterman, IBMOs manager, Salutation Project Office.

Pecora takes over from Mary Hill, who remains active in Consortium activities. Hill is a business development manager at Cisco Systems, a member company.

The Salutation Consortium has published an open specification that enables an application to locate a particular resource on a network through a broadcast query. A Salutation search can identify the location of a copier with legal-size paper, for example, or find the nearest color printer. The specification is independent of network transport, hardware platform, and operating system software and supports standard Internet and other message formats.

The Salutation Consortium is a non-profit corporation with member organizations in the United States, Europe, and Japan. Member companies include APTi, Axis Communications, Brother, Canon, Casio, Cisco, Eastman Kodak, Fuji Xerox, Fujitsu, Hewlett Packard, Hitachi, Integrated Systems, IBM, Iwatsu, Justsystem, Kobe Steel, Konica, Lexmark, Matsushita, Microware Systems, Minolta, Mita, Mitsubishi, Murata (Muratec), Novell, Oki Data, Ricoh, Rios Systems, Sanyo, Seiko Epson, Sharp, Sun Microsystems, Toshiba, and Xerox.

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SALUTATION CONSORTIUM NAMES ROBERT PASCOE AS NEW PRESIDENT http://salutation.org/salutation-consortium-names-robert-pascoe-as-new-president/ http://salutation.org/salutation-consortium-names-robert-pascoe-as-new-president/#comments Sun, 13 May 2012 12:53:59 +0000 admin2 http://salutation.org/?p=159

HIGHLAND, UT, August 9, 1999—The Salutation Consortium, a non-profit corporation focused on providing technologies that improve information interchange, has named Robert Pascoe of IBM as its new president.

Pascoe currently works for IBM and was instrumental in the formation of the Consortium, serving as its first president on an interim basis in 1995. He has continued to be active in Consortium affairs, providing strategic and technical counsel to its members.

Pascoe was nominated by IBM for the president’s position and was elected at the July 1999 Consortium Board of Director’s meeting.

At IBM, Mr. Pascoe reports to Ken Kasuga, Director of Strategy and Business Development, IBM’s Pervasive Computing Division.

“Bob’s long-standing links to the Consortium make him the obvious choice for president,” said Kasuga. “Bob’s leadership will help the Consortium drive adoption of a common information exchange platform among computers, peripherals and application software, ultimately benefiting the end user.”

“We consider this a strategic move forward for the Consortium and the Salutation Architecture,” said Robert Pecora, managing director of the Consortium. “Bob’s technical and management experience will be critical in our efforts to establish the Salutation Architecture and its information exchange techniques as a de facto standard fostering interoperability.”

Bob has more than 30 years experience with IBM and Novell including hardware and software development, product planning and management and new business development.

He is also founder of XtraWorX, LLC (Highland, UT, www.xtraworx.com), that developed the Port-of-Entry product, which enables Windows desktops and laptops with the Salutation Architecture. XtraWorX is also developing a ‘Lite’ version of the Salutation Manager for use in Windows CE and Palm

OS. Bob holds 13 U.S. and international patents and is the recipient of nine IBM Invention achievement Awards. He has been a guest presenter at conferences including SigDoc, Federal Office Systems Expo, COMMON, COMDEX, Documation and CAPVentures Multifunction Conference.

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