Telecommunications Industry Association

The Telecommunications Industry Association (TIA) is accredited by the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) to develop voluntary, consensus-based industry standards for a wide variety of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) products, and currently represents nearly 400 companies. TIA's Standards and Technology Department operates twelve engineering committees, which develop guidelines for private radio equipment, cellular towers, data terminals, satellites, telephone terminal equipment, accessibility, VoIP devices, structured cabling, data centers, mobile device communications, multimedia multicast, vehicular telematics, healthcare ICT, machine to machine communications, and smart utility networks.

Logo of Telecommunications Industry Association
Telecommunications Industry Association
AbbreviationTIA
Formation1988

Active participants include communications equipment manufacturers, service providers, government agencies, academic institutions, and end-users are engaged in TIA's standards setting process. To ensure that these standards become incorporated globally, TIA is also engaged in the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), the International Organization for Standardization (ISO), and the International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC).[1]

TIA merged in 2017 with the Quest Forum, home of the TL9000 quality standard for operators, which substantially increased the number of companies under the TIA umbrella. The boards of the two organizations were combined into a single board. The headquarters of the combined organization was the TIA location in Arlington, Virginia.[2][3]

TIA Standards

The Telecommunications Industry Assoc's most widely adopted standards include:

  1. TIA-942 Telecommunications Infrastructure Standard for Data Centers[4]
  2. TIA-568-C (telecommunications cabling standards, used by nearly all voice, video and data networks).[5]
  3. TIA-569-B Commercial Building Standards for Telecommunications Pathways and Spaces[6]
  4. TIA-607-B (Commercial grounding - earthing - standards)[7]
  5. TIA-598-C (Fiber optic color-coding)[8]
  6. TIA-222-H Structural Standard for Antenna Supporting Structures and Antennas[9]
  7. TIA-602-A Data Transmission Systems and Equipment, which standardized the common basic Hayes command set.[10]
  8. TIA-102 - Land Mobile Communications for Public Safety (APCO/P25)

Participating in TIA Standards Development

TIA encourages engineers who represent the manufacturers and/or users of network equipment technology products and services (from both the public and private sectors), to become engaged in TIA's engineering committees, by voting and submitting technical contributions for inclusion in future standards.

Collaborative Activities

TIA is a participating standards organization of the ITU-T Global Standards Collaboration (GSC) initiative. The GSC has created a Machine-to-Machine Standardization Task Force (MSTF) to foster industry collaboration on standards across different vertical markets, such as finance, e-health, connected vehicles, and utilities.[11]

Legislation

TIA supported the E-LABEL Act (H.R. 5161; 113th Congress), a bill that would direct the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to allow manufacturers of electronic devices with a screen to display information required by the agency digitally on the screen rather than on a label affixed to the device.[12][13] Grant Seiffert argued that "by granting device manufacturers the ability to use e-labels, the legislation eases the technical and logistical burdens on manufactures and improves consumer access to important device information."[14]

gollark: This is one of the more Cish modern languages around.
gollark: Better error messages are good. Writing more code for worse ones is actually not good.
gollark: Indeed.
gollark: I mean you're writing more code than necessary for that. More detailed error messages are probably good.
gollark: That... is basically what verbose means?

References

  1. TIA standards Archived 2011-11-06 at the Wayback Machine (official site)
  2. "TIA and QuEST Forum Announce Merger" (Press release). 2017-09-19. Retrieved 2020-05-12.
  3. Buckley, Sean (19 Sep 2017). "TIA, QuEST Forum merge, combine standards, benchmarking focus". Fierce Telecom. Retrieved 12 May 2020.
  4. "TIA-942". Retrieved 28 April 2015.
  5. TIA-568
  6. TIA-569-B
  7. TIA-607-B
  8. TIA/EIA-598
  9. TIA-222
  10. TIA-602
  11. MSTF
  12. "CBO - H.R. 5161". Congressional Budget Office. Retrieved 12 September 2014.
  13. Marcos, Cristina (11 September 2014). "House passes 'E-labeling' bill". The Hill. Retrieved 12 September 2014.
  14. Hattern, Julian (11 September 2014). "OVERNIGHT TECH: Industry cheers device laws". The Hill. Retrieved 12 September 2014.
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