ITU T.50
ITU-T recommendation T.50 specifies the International Reference Alphabet (IRA), formerly International Alphabet No. 5 (IA5), a character encoding. ASCII is the U.S. variant of that character set.
The original version from November 1988 corresponds to ISO 646. The current version is from September 1992.
History
At the beginning was the International Telegraph Alphabet No. 2 (ITA2), a five bits code. IA5 is an improvement based on seven bits bytes.
- V.3 IA5 (1968) Initial version, superseded[1]
- V.3 IA5 (1972)[1]
- V.3 IA5 (1976-10) Superseded
- V.3 IA5 (1980-11) Superseded
- T.50 IA5 (1984-10) Superseded
- T.50 IA5 (1988-11) Superseded[1]
- T.50 IRA (1992-09) In force[1]
Use
This standard is referenced by other standards such as RFC 3966.
It is also used by some analog modems such as Cisco ones.[2]
This standard is referenced by other standards such as RFC 3939 - Calling Line Identification for Voice Mail Messages.
Standardisation
- Identical standard: ISO 646:1991 (Twinned)
References
- 1 2 3 4 Salste, Tuomas (January 2016). "7-bit character sets: Revisions of ASCII". Aivosto Oy. urn:nbn:fi-fe201201011004. Archived from the original on 2016-06-13. Retrieved 2016-06-13.
- ↑ "AT Command Set and Register Summary for NM-8AM-V2, NM-16AM-V2, WIC-1AM, and WIC-2AM Analog Modem WAN Interface Cards - 2: Syntax and Procedures [Cisco 3600 Series Multiservice Platforms] - Cisco Systems". Cisco.com. Retrieved 2012-10-03.
External links
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/28/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.