Micras Organisation for Standardisation: Difference between revisions

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* {{team flag|Ransenar}}: Bureau of Standards and Measurements, Ministry of State
* {{team flag|Ransenar}}: Bureau of Standards and Measurements, Ministry of State
* {{team flag|Sanama}}: Office of Standards, Weights and Measurements
* {{team flag|Sanama}}: Office of Standards, Weights and Measurements
* {{team flag|South Sea Islands}}: [[Government of the South Sea Islands]]
* {{team flag|Unified Governorates}}: Office of Coordination and Harmonisation, Commission for Information
* {{team flag|Unified Governorates}}: Office of Coordination and Harmonisation, Commission for Information
* {{team flag|Drak-Modan}}: Bureau of Standards, Implementation, and Compliance, Ministry of Domestic Affairs
* {{team flag|Drak-Modan}}: Bureau of Standards, Implementation, and Compliance, Ministry of Domestic Affairs

Revision as of 06:13, 19 August 2020

The Micras Organisation for Standardisation is an international organisation founded in Acquecalde, Sanama in 1680. Its stated goal is to promote worldwide proprietary, industrial and commercial standards. Adoption of its proposed standards is strictly voluntary. The organisation is incorporated as a non-profit under Sanaman law.

Members

Standards

MOS–1: Two-letter country codes

See List of two-letter country codes

MOS–2: Three-letter country codes

See List of FMF three-letter codes

MOS–3: Internet country top-level domains

  • Option 1: Nijima system (e.g. @@nat/edu/usf/bagelston) - benefit: easier to use than Option 3 due to reuse of FMF codes, detriment: not as secure as Option 2
  • Option 2: Panopticon-monitoring data carrying network (e.g. merensk_node/kernel65/adjunct9/SEG.ugb) - benefit: data security, detriment: access hierarchical and data heavily partitioned
  • Option 3: "Terran" system (e.g. bagelston.edu.nt) - benefit: ubiquity, detriment: insecure by default

MOS–4: Currency codes

See List of circulating currencies

MOS–5: Dates

Norton calendar, notation DD.MM.YYYY, with months written in Roman numerals, all other in Arabic numerals. Names of months not used for international purposes. Use of the Norton calendar does not conflict with use of the Gregorian calendar for sports.

MOS–6: Time

Coordinated Micras Time: Time zones. Time using a 24-hour clock of 60 minutes (each minute 60 seconds long).

MOS–7: Narrative

Work in progress.

MOS–8: Wikification

Work in progress.

MOS–9: Languages

Work in progress.