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BSI – British Standards Institution aka BSI Group; DStan – UK Defence Standardization; United States of America. ANSI – American National Standards Institute; ACI – American Concrete Institute; NISO – National Information Standards Organization; NIST – National Institute of Standards and Technology
The standards define protocols, data models, file formats and application programming interfaces for the use in the development and testing of automotive electronic control units. A large amount of popular tools in the areas of simulation, measurement, calibration and test automation are compliant to ASAM standards.
OSEK (Offene Systeme und deren Schnittstellen für die Elektronik in Kraftfahrzeugen; English: "Open Systems and their Interfaces for the Electronics in Motor Vehicles") is a standards body that has produced specifications for an embedded operating system, a communications stack, and a network management protocol for automotive embedded systems.
The Automotive Electronics Council (AEC) is an organization originally established in the 1990s by Chrysler, Ford, and GM for the purpose of establishing common part-qualification and quality-system standards. The AEC Component Technical Committee is the standardization body for establishing standards for reliable, high quality electronic ...
With nonprofit, investment and semiconductor partners, ACC's training will now upskill low-wage workers to high-paying manufacturing jobs nationally. 'Center of the universe': ACC announces plan ...
IPC standards are used by the electronics manufacturing industry. IPC-A-610, [4] Acceptability of Electronic Assemblies, is used worldwide by original equipment manufacturers and EMS companies. There are more than 3600 trainers worldwide who are certified to train and test on the standard. Standards are created by committees of industry volunteers.
ISO 26262, titled "Road vehicles – Functional safety", is an international standard for functional safety of electrical and/or electronic systems that are installed in serial production road vehicles (excluding mopeds), defined by the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) in 2011, and revised in 2018.
IATF 16949:2016 replaced ISO/TS 16949 in October 2016 by International Automotive Task Force. [2] [3] The goal of the standard is to provide for continual improvement, emphasizing defect prevention and the reduction of variation and waste in the automotive industry supply chain and assembly process. The standard was designed to fit into an ...