Information technology - Telecommunications and information exchange between
systems - Synchronizati...
The international community has decided to make this standard available only in
the English language version. It has been adopted as a National Standard of
Canada on this basis.
This National Standard of Canada is equivalent to International Standard
ISO/IEC 11573:1994.
1.1 Scope
This International Standard contains requirements necessary for the
synchronization of PISNs. Timing within a…
The international community has decided to make this standard available only in
the English language version. It has been adopted as a National Standard of
Canada on this basis.
This National Standard of Canada is equivalent to International Standard
ISO/IEC 9899:1990.
1 Scope
This International Standard specifies the form and establishes the
interpretation of programs written in…
Information technology - Text Communication - Message-Oriented Text Interchange
Systems (MOTIS) - P...
The international community has decided to make this standard available only in
the English language version. It has been adopted as a National Standard of
Canada on this basis.
This National Standard of Canada is equivalent to International Standard
ISO/IEC 10021-2:1990.
1 Scope
This part of ISO/IEC 10021 defines the overall architecture of the MHS and
serves as a technical…
Commentary on CSA Standard CAN/CSA-S16.1-M89, Limit States Design of Steel
Structures
1. SCOPE AND APPLICATIOn
This Standard applies generally to steel structures, and structural steel
components in other structures. The analysis, design, detailing, fabrication,
and erection requirements contained in the Standard normally provide a
satisfactory level of structural integrity for most steel structures.
Clause 1.2 states that requirements for some specific types of…
Machinery for Forestry - Winches - Technical Means for Ensuring Safety
This National Standard of Canada is equivalent to International Standard ISO
4254-4:1990.
This part of ISO 4254 specifies safety requirements for winches used on
forestry machinery and agricultural machinery used in forestry.
It applies only to skidding winches mounted on mobile forestry machinery, e.g.
skidders and forwarders and on agricultural machinery used in forestry
operations.…
This National Standard of Canada is equivalent to American National Standards
Institute standard ANSI T1.408-1990.
1.1 General
It establishes performance and technical criteria for interfacing and
interconnecting the various functional groups shown in figure 1. Compliance
with this standard is intended to ensure compatibility at the interface points
/a and /b (figure 1) and should not…
General Introduction
One of the key requirements before organizations can exchange administrative, commercial and transport information between their computers, without manual intervention, is agreement on the content and structure of the information to be transmitted. In EDIFACT, this is achieved by developing United Nations Standard Electronic Messages (UNSM's), for both national and…
Tractors and Machinery for Agriculture and Forestry - Technical Means for
Ensuring Safety - Part 1...
This National Standard of Canada is equivalent to International Standard ISo
4254/1-1985.
This part of ISO 4254 specifies technical means of improving the degree of
personal safety of operators and others involved in the course of normal
running, maintenance and use, intended to be carried out by the user of the
machinery.
This Guide establishes basic safety principles for technical bodies preparing national and international standards for products which are intended specifically for use by children; these principles should also apply to products with which children are likely to come into contact. The following aspects are considered: ergonomic considerations, toxicity, flammability and thermal injuries, ingestion…
This Guide establishes basic safety principles for technical bodies preparing national and international standards for products which are intended specifically for use by children; these principles should also apply to products with which children are likely to come into contact. The following aspects are considered: ergonomic considerations, toxicity, flammability and thermal injuries, ingestion…