The drive to initiate international standards for the DCAs was initiated in 1980 at the IBM Rochester facility. A team, consisting of two MODCA architects, an RTOCA architect, and a PTOCA architect, was assembled. These architects were responsible for forming IBM consensus for the design of the data streams and to take the work into the international standards arena. There was a concerted effort to bring the international community into the development. This decision was based in part on the experience gained over the acceptance of GML into an international SGML standard. To avoid the long delay of creating the architecture, they wanted to get everyone involved early.
SGML standardization had taken many years to develop. IBM's work with document content had been pushed by the needs of main frame computers where GML and DCA were in use, but that experience was pointing to a need for standardized component architectures for revisable and non-revisable text in particular. In 1981, shortly after its inception, the group was moved along with the IBM 5280 Distributed Data System to IBM Austin near Round Rock, TX, where the work continued with mixed success. As the architectures were becoming more firmly positioned on the international stage, the team was moved again in 1987 to The IBM Dallas Programming Center, where in 1998 it was disbanded and the work on the DCA architectures discontinued due mainly to the PC community which had gone in a different direction of necessity. The DCA architectures were fully completed, but not completely agreed upon after 18 years. There were no active implementations in sight. The PC world had decided on
HTML (believed to be an application of the
SGML international standard) and used portions of it for their purposes. Microsoft Word eventually used the similar datastream for the internal working datastream for storage of editable content. Even though the SGML standard was available, it was impractical to use the full SGML parser implementation, so a potential subset of it became the de facto standard for revisable text used today in the PC arena. At about the same time, Adobe Systems designed and produced the printable document encoding
PDF, which has become the standard for PC-produced printable documents. The international standard was set in 2008, with input from the users, who decided to use the products offered in great numbers. The decision was driven by the need for the product, and the solution found was far more acceptable than the standards committees could design. Over 10 years of work had not produced an acceptable method, and the PC computing community created what they needed in less time. Attempting to achieve a consensus document data stream was quickly out-flanked by the available and usable content provided by the companies who did not attempt to share with others, but created a workable solution and successfully sold it to users. The output of the word processing software is 'printed' into the PDF format provided by the most used presentation product. For example, Microsoft Word provides a printer selection 'Microsoft Print to PDF' to produce the requisite output for a PDF document. A similar method could have been used to produce the international standard had one eventually arrived. When IBM disbanded its Dallas Programming Center in 1998, the entire staff of architects retired and left the company, except the manager, who was moved, ending the DCA architecture project for the foreseeable future at IBM. ==See also==