Standards
This Code of Practice specifies requirements for poultry meat which have not yet been treated in any way to ensure their preservation, except that it has been chilled or frozen and is intended for human consumption, whether by direct sale or through further processing. This Code of Practice applies to all establishments in which poultry is slaughtered, packed, or otherwise handled in the course of preparation, and all establishments in which poultry cuts and parts are processed, packed, or otherwise handled in the course of preparation. It also applies to conditions of transport from the establishment. This Code of Practice does not cover requirements for poultry rearing.
This standard establishes specification for nutrient requirements in the rations fed to poultry. It provides guidance on Good Manufacturing Practices for the production of poultry feeds and Good on Farming Feeding Practices. It applies to the production and use of all materials designed for poultry feed and feed ingredients at all levels, whether produced industrially or on farm.
This standard specifies the requirements for processed poultry carcasses, poultry parts and poultry products for human consumption. It gives definitions of the market classes of poultry and requirements for sanitation, plant hygiene, the dressing operation, grading, packaging, labelling and marketing as well as ante-mortem and post-mortem inspection of poultry products imported and locally produced and processed poultry. It does not apply to freshly killed poultry prepared for direct sale to consumers for which conditions may be prescribed in National Regulations.
This standard specifies the typical layout plan, hygienic and sanitary, and basic requirements for an abattoir for carrying out slaughter of sheep, goats, pigs and large animals, for human consumption.
This part of ISO 15489 provides guidelines on managing records 1 of originating organizations, public or private, for internal and external clients. All the elements outlined in this part of ISO 15489 are recommended to ensure that adequate records according to the principles and elements outlined in this part ISO 15489 are provided in ISO /TR 15489-2 (Guidelines).
This part of ISO 15489 is an implementation guide to ISO 15489-1 -1 for use by record management professional and those charged with management records in their organizations. It provides one methodology that will facilitates the implementation of ISO 15489-1 in all organization that have a need to manage their records. It gives an overview of the processes and factors to consider in organization wishing to comply with ISO 15489-1.
This part of ISO/IEC 9314 specifies the Media access control (MAC) , the middle sublayer of the data link layer (DLL) for fiber distributed data interface (FDDI) .FDDI (ISO/IEC 9314) provides a high -bandwidth (100 Mbit/s).general - purpose interconnection among information processing systems, subsystems and peripheral equipment , using fiber optics or other transmission media. FDDI can be configured to support a sustained data transfer rate of at least 80 Mbit/s (10 Mbytes/s). FDDI provides connectivity for many nodes distributed over distances of many kilometers in extent . Certain default parameter values for FDDDI (e.g. timer settings) are calculated on the basis of up to 1000 transmission links or up to 200 km total fiber path length (typically corresponding to 5000 nodes and 100 km of dual fiber cable, respectively), however, the FDDI protocols can support much larger networks by increasing these parameter values.
This part of ISO/IEC 18026 provides an overview of different techniques of security gateways, of components and of different types of security gateway architectures, it also provides guidlines for selection and configuration of security gateways.
This part of ISO/IEC 20000 defines the requirements for a service provider to deliver managed services of an acceptable quality for its customers
This part of ISO/IEC 20000 represents an industry consensus on quality standards for IT service management processes . These service management processes deliver the best possible service to meet a customer's business needs within agreed resource levels, i.e. Service that is professional cost-effective and with risks which are understood and managed.