IEEE Formed from AIEE and IRE Merger
1 January 1963StandardsOrganisation foundedDate precision, exactEvidence grade, primary1 primary source
Drivers:
The convergence of electrical and electronic technologies made a unified organisation more effective for both professional development and standards work.
IEEE (pronounced 'eye-triple-E') is an organisation of engineers that creates standards for technology. When you connect to Wi-Fi, you are using an IEEE standard (802.11). When you plug in an Ethernet cable, that is also an IEEE standard (802.3). IEEE standards are everywhere in modern technology.
IEEE Formed from AIEE and IRE Merger event plate
Structured atlas record showing date, domain, evidence grade, source count, and predecessor and successor links.
Forecasts and counterfactuals stay labelled as opinion in the event data. Source: Computer History Museum.
Before
Electrical engineering and electronics were represented by separate organisations: AIEE (American Institute of Electrical Engineers, founded 1884) and IRE (Institute of Radio Engineers, founded 1912). The growing overlap between these fields made separate organisations inefficient.
What changed
IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) was formed from the merger of AIEE and IRE. It became the world's largest technical professional organisation, developing standards for electrical, electronics, and computing technologies including Ethernet (802.3), Wi-Fi (802.11), and many others.
How it happened
As electronics and electrical engineering increasingly overlapped, the two organisations merged on 1 January 1963. IEEE combined their membership, publications, and standards activities. The IEEE Standards Association became a major force in technology standardisation.
Outcomes
- Created world's largest technical professional organisation
- IEEE 802 standards became foundation of networking
- Established technical conferences and publications
- Developed standards for emerging technologies
Limitations
- US-centric origins, though now international
- Standards process can favour established players
- Membership fees limit accessibility
- Some standards compete with other bodies' work
Lessons learnt
- Professional organisations shape technology direction
- Standards bodies need industry participation
- Mergers can strengthen standards activities
- Technical communities benefit from unified representation
Stakeholders and artefacts
Organisations
- IEEEstandards_bodyFounded organisation
- AIEEstandards_bodyPredecessor organisation
- IREstandards_bodyPredecessor organisation
Artefacts
- IEEEspecificationInstitute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers
- IEEE 802specificationLAN/MAN standards committee
Key terms
Causality
Preceded by: International Organization for Standardization (ISO) Founded.
Made possible: Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) Established.
On this course
Read in the path Standards Bodies: How Technology Gets Standardised.