FIPA

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The Foundation for Intelligent Physical Agents (FIPA) is a body for developing and setting computer software standards for heterogeneous and interacting agents and agent-based systems.

FIPA was founded as a Swiss not-for-profit organization in 1996 with the ambitious goal of defining a full set of standards for both implementing systems within which agents could execute (agent platforms) and specifying how agents themselves should communicate and interact.

Within its lifetime the organization's membership included several academic institutions and a large number of companies including Hewlett Packard, IBM, British Telecom, Sun Microsystems, Fujitsu and many more. A number of standards were proposed, however, despite several agent platforms adopting the "FIPA standard" for agent communication it never succeeded in gaining the commercial support which was originally envisaged. The Swiss organization was dissolved in 2005 and an IEEE standards committee was set up in its place.

The most widely adopted of the FIPA standards is their Agent Communication Language FIPA-ACL.

The name FIPA is somewhat of a misnomer as the "agents" with which the body is concerned exist solely in software (and hence have no physical aspect). Some cynics have also applied the same reasoning to the "Intelligent" part of the organization's name.

[edit] Systems using FIPA standards

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