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Many communities rely on infrastructure that is fragile, manually operated, or dependent on unstable networks. | Many communities rely on infrastructure that is fragile, manually operated, or dependent on unstable networks. | ||
AOWIS addresses this by defining: | AOWIS addresses this by defining: | ||
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The goal is to make essential systems **robust, maintainable, and locally operable**. | The goal is to make essential systems **robust, maintainable, and locally operable**. | ||
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Revision as of 05:08, 18 March 2026
AOWIS provides a unified framework...
- power is unreliable
- connectivity is intermittent
- equipment is diverse or aging
- trained staff may be limited
- safety and autonomy are essential
AOWIS enables systems that continue working safely — even when everything else fails.
Many communities rely on infrastructure that is fragile, manually operated, or dependent on unstable networks. AOWIS addresses this by defining:
- offline‑first operation
- human‑in‑the‑loop control
- safe fallback behavior
- modular, extensible logic
- shared infrastructure models
- transparent governance
The goal is to make essential systems **robust, maintainable, and locally operable**.
How AOWIS Works
AOWIS is built around a three‑layer control model:
- Field Controller – Local, autonomous, safety‑critical
- Farm Controller – Coordination, scheduling, logic
- HQ Controller – Oversight, reporting, governance
Core principles include:
- Offline‑first
- Measurement‑driven
- Fail‑safe by design
- Human‑operable at all times
- Modular and extensible
- Transparent and auditable
Access the Standard
The AOWIS standard is organized into dedicated namespaces. These sections form the technical backbone of the project.
- [[Standard:|Standard]] – Normative requirements and definitions
- [[Concepts:|Concepts]] – Philosophy, rationale, and real‑world context
- [[Architecture:|Architecture]] – System structure and controller design
- [[Infrastructure:|Infrastructure]] – Physical systems and components
- [[Measurement:|Measurement]] – Sensors, manual readings, derived values
- [[Data:|Data]] – Data models, logs, sync formats
- [[Operations:|Operations]] – Runtime logic and decision hierarchy
- [[Modules:|Modules]] – Domain‑specific extensions
- [[Databases:|Databases]] – Federated knowledge bases
- [[Governance:|Governance]] – Certification, compliance, licensing
- [[Training:|Training]] – Human capacity building
- [[Reference:|Reference]] – Examples, glossary, FAQ
For a full overview, see the Table of Contents.
Start Here
If you are new to AOWIS, begin with:
- Design Philosophy
- Definitions
- Normative Requirements
- Module Template
- Contributor Guide
- Writing Style Guide
These pages explain how to read, use, and contribute to the standard.
Governance & Legitimacy
AOWIS includes a transparent governance model to ensure:
- open participation
- clear certification processes
- stable versioning
- long‑term protection of the standard
See: [[Governance:|Governance]].
Real‑World Impact
AOWIS is designed for practical use in:
- rural water systems
- smallholder agriculture
- community irrigation
- livestock and poultry systems
- greenhouses and controlled environments
Case studies and implementation examples can be found in the [[Reference:|Reference]] namespace.
Navigation
AOWIS is an open, evolving standard. Contributions are welcome.
