The International Standards Organization (ISO) is the overarching world authority in this area. There are many national standards bodies in every country but as the world needs to trade, standards now have to be ratified internationally.
iso
PnP
It should only specify what the system should do and refrain from stating how to do these. This means that the SRS document should specify the external behavior of the system and not discuss the implementation issues. The SRS document should view the system to be developed as black box, and should specify the externally visible behavior of the system. For this reason, the SRS document is also called the black-box specification of a system.
computers, phones, radios, any electronic thing really! but most of all we have changed! development to the humans
(Electronic Delay Storage Automatic Calculator) Developed by Maurice Wilkes at Cambridge University Mathematical Laboratory in England.
It could. one should bear in mind that SW Diathermy was developed in the twenties and thirties, has some ( largely corrected or adjusted) hazards, and this was before the advent of electronic computers. So there may be discovered hazards.
PnP
1940s
ATX form factor
1979
The DVD player was not really invented. It was developed as a specification from the earlier Video CD. The specification was finalized in December of 1995. The Video CD was developed from CDs starting in 1987. Originally, the disks could only store about five minutes of video, but a number of improvements took that through a series of improvements until the DVD was developed.
John Vincent Atanasoff
Tod Machover
Pakistan Muslim League.PML is a paper, printing and publishing markup specification developed by Paperhub which is based on XML.
SEPP (Secure Electronic Payments Protocol) is an open specification for secure bank card transactions over the Internet that was jointly developed by IBM, Netscape, GTE, Cybercash and MasterCard. Building on the iKP protocol, SEPP messages are transmitted as Multi-purpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME) attachments
Quantum Mechanics
Jon Von Neumann
The first electronic digital computers were developed between 1940 and 1945 in the United Kingdom and United States.