UAIX has tightened the technical reading map across the core record pages so implementers can see how the current published profile family moves from normative prose into schemas, registry entries, examples, validator output, and release evidence.
What changed
- Specification and UAI-1 now name the current published profile family more concretely so readers can tell what the release actually covers.
- Schemas, Registry, and Examples now explain the roles and compatibility relationships of the current request, response, capability, error, and conformance-result records more directly.
- The refreshed technical copy now makes the shortest path from profile selection to validator-backed evidence easier to reconstruct from the public record.
How to use this update
- Start with UAI-1 when you need the normative envelope and published profile family.
- Use Schemas and Registry together when deciding which profile to implement and what compatibility assumptions travel with it.
- Use Examples and the Validator to turn that profile choice into repeatable public evidence, then carry the result into Implementations.
- Keep the Changelog, News, and References and Contributors attached when the change becomes a public release or review packet.
Why this matters
UAIX is easier to adopt when the technical stack reads like one connected record rather than a set of disconnected catalogs. This update improves that technical legibility without inventing new profiles, SDKs, or runtime tracks that the site has not yet published.