Sedris

SEDRIS (Synthetic Environment Data Representation and Interchange Specification) is an international data coding standard infrastructure technology created to represent environmental data in virtual environments.[1][2] Environmental data represented by SEDRIS may be concrete, such as trees and mountains, or abstract, such as the behavior of light.[3][4] The infrastructure frees users to place their focus on application development and also facilitates the exchange of data for reuse and wider scrutiny.[2] Research into shared ways to represent environmental data was begun in the 1980s in order to permit distributed simulations to work together. SEDRIS was launched in 1994 by program managers of the United States Army's Simulation Training and Instrumentation Command and the US Department of Defense's Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency.[5]

Standardization

SEDRIS has led to forming the series standards of

gollark: But I'm trustworthy and *could* have helper!
gollark: [Nn]obody is a moderator!
gollark: ++delete O-class stars
gollark: I mean, it's "unique" inasmuch as it's not exactly the same as every other star in some way, but... so are you, and also me.
gollark: There are billions of G-class stars.

See also

References

  1. Technologies for e-learning and digital entertainment : first international conference, Edutainment 2006, Hangzhou, China, April 16-19, 2006 : proceedings. Pan, Zhigeng, 1965-. Berlin: Springer. 2006. p. 1181. ISBN 9783540334248. OCLC 262692734.CS1 maint: others (link)
  2. (Erdal), Çayirci, E. (2009). Computer assisted exercises and training : a reference guide. Marinčič, Dušan., Wiley InterScience (Online service). Hoboken, N.J.: John Wiley & Sons. p. 197. ISBN 9780470498620. OCLC 441886978.
  3. Group, Orion Development. "SEDRIS FAQs". www.sedris.org. Retrieved 2018-07-01.
  4. "SEDRIS Abstract Base". www.sedris.org. Retrieved 2018-07-01.
  5. AFTS. "About SEDRIS". www.sedris.org. Retrieved 2018-07-01.
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