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  2. Request for Comments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Request_for_Comments

    Although written by Steve Crocker, the RFC had emerged from an early working group discussion between Steve Crocker, Steve Carr, and Jeff Rulifson. In RFC 3, which first defined the RFC series, Crocker started attributing the RFC series to the Network Working Group. Rather than being a formal committee, it was a loose association of researchers ...

  3. List of RFCs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_RFCs

    This is a partial list of RFCs (request for comments memoranda). A Request for Comments (RFC) is a publication in a series from the principal technical development and standards-setting bodies for the Internet, most prominently the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF).

  4. Internet Experiment Note - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Experiment_Note

    The Request for Comments (RFC) series was considered the province of the ARPANET project and the Network Working Group (NWG) which defined the network protocols used on it. Thus, the members of the Internet project decided on publishing their own series of documents, Internet Experiment Notes , which were modeled after the RFCs.

  5. Internet Standard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Standard

    An Internet Standard is documented by [4] a Request for Comments (RFC) or a set of RFCs. A specification that is to become a Standard or part of a Standard begins as an Internet Draft, and is later, usually after several revisions, accepted and published by the RFC Editor as an RFC and labeled a Proposed Standard.

  6. Wikipedia:Requests for comment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:RFC

    If you are starting another RfC on a page which already has one or more ongoing RfCs, first ensure that all of the existing {} tags already contain a |rfcid= parameter. The process looks like this: Add your question with one {} tag. Wait for the bot to edit the page and add an id number to the first RfC question.

  7. History of PDF - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_PDF

    PDF/X (since 2001 - series of ISO 15929 and ISO 15930 standards) - a.k.a. "PDF for Exchange" - for the Graphic technology - Prepress digital data exchange - (working in ISO Technical committee 130), based on PDF 1.3, PDF 1.4 and later also PDF 1.6; PDF/A (since 2005 - series of ISO 19005 standards) - a.k.a. "PDF for Archive" - Document ...

  8. File Transfer Protocol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_Transfer_Protocol

    Files are viewed as an arbitrary sequence of bytes, characters or words. This is the usual file structure on Unix systems and other systems such as CP/M, MS-DOS and Microsoft Windows. (Section 3.1.1.1) R or RECORD structure (record-oriented). Files are viewed as divided into records, which may be fixed or variable length.

  9. PDF - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PDF

    The submission of press-ready PDF files is a replacement for the problematic need for receiving collected native working files. In 2006, PDF was widely accepted as the standard print job format at the Open Source Development Labs Printing Summit.

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