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IEEE 1888-2014

Current Revision

IEEE Standard for Ubiquitous Green Community Control Network Protocol

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Revision Standard - Active. The standard identifies gateways for field-bus networks, data storage for archiving and developing data sharing platforms, and application units as important system components for developing digital communities, i.e., building-scale and city-wide ubiquitous facility networking infrastructure. The standard defines a data exchange protocol that generalizes and interconnects these components (gateways, storage, application units) over the IPv4/v6-based networks. This enables integration of multiple facilities, data storage, application services such as central management, energy saving, environmental monitoring, and alarm notification systems.
The standard describes a remote control architecture of digital community, intelligent building groups, and digital metropolitan networks; specifies interactive data formats between devices and systems; and gives a standardized definition of equipment, service services, signals, and interactive messages in this digital community network. The digital community remote control network opens application interfaces for public administration, public services, property management services, and individual service services, which enables intelligent interconnection, collaboration service, remote surveillance, and central management to be feasible. Surveillance networks, consumer electronics, remote service systems, public administration systems, security linkage systems, and emergency reaction systems will be integrated into the community network seamlessly. Based on TCP/IP open systems, the network architecture adopts active and emerging technologies, supporting diverse access technologies in the physical layer, supporting IPv4/v6 in the network layer, and integrating well with the next generation converged networks.
The standard aims to provide proper remote control and collaborating management solutions for operators, community administrators, public service providers, government departments, and individual users, so as to use and control facilities in community and building groups effectively, such as sensors, surveillance monitors, HVAC, lighting systems, fire-fighting systems, consumer electronics, and so on; The public environment monitor mechanism is set up to ease energy shortage and environment degradation through remote surveillance, operation, management, and maintenance, leaving a secure, comfortable, and convenient living environment. Energy, environment, and security are taken into consideration to realize reasonable plans and remote control in community networks.

SDO IEEE: Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
Document Number 1888
Publication Date May 30, 2014
Language en - English
Page Count 71
Revision Level
Supercedes
Committee Entity Collaborative Activities Governance Board
Publish Date Document Id Type View
May 30, 2014 1888-2014 Revision
April 13, 2011 1888-2011 Revision