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Object Management Group

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Computer industry standards consortium
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Object Management Group
AbbreviationOMG
Formation1989; 37 years ago (1989)
TypeNonprofit
Legal statusConsortium
PurposeStandards development
Headquarters9C Medway Road, PMB 274
Milford, Massachusetts
Official language
English
Websitewww.omg.org

TheObject Management Group (OMG) is a computer industryStandards Development Organization (SDO), or Voluntary Consensus Standards Body (VCSB). OMG develops enterprise integration and modeling standards for a range of technologies.

Business activities

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The goal of the OMG was a common portable and interoperable object model with methods and data that work using all types of development environments on all types of platforms.[1]

The group provides only specifications, not implementations. But before a specification can be accepted as a standard by the group, the members of the submitter team must guarantee that they will bring a conforming product to market within a year. This is an attempt to prevent unimplemented (and unimplementable) standards. Other private companies or open source groups are encouraged to produce conforming products and OMG is attempting to develop mechanisms to enforce true interoperability.

OMG hosts four technical meetings per year for its members and interested nonmembers. The Technical Meetings provide a neutral forum to discuss, develop and adopt standards that enable software interoperability.

History

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Founded in 1989 by eleven companies (includingHewlett-Packard,IBM,Sun Microsystems,Apple Computer,American Airlines, iGrafx, andData General), OMG's initial focus was to create a heterogeneousdistributedobject standard. The founding executive team included Christopher Stone and John Slitz. Current leadership includes chairman and CEO Bill Hoffman and Technical Director Mike Bennett. Dr.Richard Soley, who led OMG from its creation onwards and was its Chairman and President, died in 2023.

Since 2000, the group's international headquarters has been located inBoston, Massachusetts; however, OMG's corporate office is now virtual.

OMG is astandards development organization whose technical work is accomplished by Task Forces, Special Interest Groups, and an Architecture Board (Structure and Governance).

Over OMG's history, its members have defined more than 200 standard specifications. A few of the most widely known OMG standards are mentioned below.

  • The earliest one, adopted in 1991, was theCommon Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA).
  • In 1997, theUnified Modeling Language (UML) was added to the list of OMG adopted technologies. UML is a standardized general-purpose modeling language in the field of object-oriented software engineering.
  • In June 2005, the Business Process Management Initiative (BPMI.org) and OMG announced the merger of their respective Business Process Management (BPM) activities to form theBusiness Modeling and Integration Domain Task Force (BMI DTF).
  • In 2006 theBusiness Process Model and Notation (BPMN) was adopted as a standard by OMG. In 2007 theBusiness Motivation Model (BMM) was adopted as a standard by the OMG. The BMM is a metamodel that provides a vocabulary for corporate governance and strategic planning and is particularly relevant to businesses undertakinggovernance,regulatory compliance,business transformation andstrategic planning activities.
  • In 2009 OMG, together with theSoftware Engineering Institute atCarnegie Mellon launched theConsortium of IT Software Quality (CISQ).
  • In April 2011 OMG formed the Cloud Standards Customer Council. Founding sponsors includedCA,IBM,Kaavo,Rackspace andSoftware AG. The CSCC was an end user advocacy group dedicated to accelerating cloud's successful adoption, and drilling down into the standards, security and interoperability issues surrounding the transition to the cloud. In July 2018, the CSCC was reformed as theOMG Cloud Working Group.
  • In September 2011, the OMG Board of Directors voted to adopt the Vector Signal and Image Processing Library (VSIPL) specification. Work for adopting the specification was led byMentor Graphics' Embedded Software Division, RunTime Computing Solutions, TheMitre Corporation as well as the High Performance Embedded Computing Software Initiative (HPEC-SI). VSIPL is an application programming interface (API). VSIPL and VSIPL++ contain functions used for common signal processing kernel and other computations. These functions include basic arithmetic, trigonometric, transcendental, signal processing, linear algebra, and image processing. The VSIPL family of libraries has been implemented by multiple vendors for a range of processor architectures, including x86, PowerPC, Cell, and NVIDIA GPUs. VSIPL and VSIPL++ are designed to maintain portability across a range of processor architectures. Additionally, VSIPL++ was designed from the start to include support for parallelism.
  • In Late 2012, the group's Board of Directors adopted the Automated Function Point (AFP) specification.[2] The push for adoption was led by the Consortium for IT Software Quality (CISQ). AFP provides a standard for automating the popularfunction point measure according to the counting guidelines of the International Function Point User Group (IFPUG).
  • On March 27, 2014, OMG announced it would be managing the newly formed Industrial Internet Consortium (IIC).
  • In December 2019, OMG formed anArtificial Intelligence Platform Task Force.
  • In 2020, OMG formed theDigital Twin Consortium (DTC), and in January 2024 the IIC was merged into the DTC.
  • TheAugmented Reality for Enterprise Alliance (AREA), founded in 2014, also became a managed program of OMG in October 2021.

Ratified ISO Standards

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Of the many standards maintained by the OMG, 13 have been ratified asISO standards.[3] These standards are:

Historically, there were packagesorg.omg.* inJava and itsstandard library. These have since been deprecated in Java 9 and removed in Java 11.[4]

See also

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References

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  1. ^This article is based on material taken fromObject+Management+Group at theFree On-line Dictionary of Computing prior to 1 November 2008 and incorporated under the "relicensing" terms of theGFDL, version 1.3 or later.
  2. ^Julie Pike (2013-01-17)."OMG Adopts Automated Function Point Specification".OMG. RetrievedAugust 13, 2016.
  3. ^"The OMG Specifications Catalog".www.omg.org. Retrieved2025-01-22.
  4. ^"java.corba (Java SE 10 & JDK 10)".docs.oracle.com. Retrieved10 October 2025.

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