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Communications of the ACM (CACM), Volume 44, 2001
Volume 44, Number 1, January 2001
- Diane Crawford:
Editorial Pointers. 5 - Robert Fox:
News Track. 9
- Robert L. Glass:
An embarrassing, yet rewarding, ending to a previous column. 11-13
- Phillip G. Armour:
The laws of software process. 1517
- Leonard N. Foner:
Fixing a flawed domain name system. 19-21
- Åke Grönlund:
Democracy in an IT-framed society: introduction. 22-26 - Richard T. Watson, Bryan Mundy:
A strategic perspective of electronic democracy. 27-30 - Ari-Veikko Anttiroiko:
Toward the European information society. 3135 - Per-Olof Ågren:
Is online democracy in the EU for professionals only? 36-38 - Ted Becker:
Rating the impact of new technologies on democracy. 39-43 - Ignace Snellen:
ICTs, bureaucracies, and the future of democracy. 45-48 - Joachim Åström:
Should democracy online be quick, strong, or thin? 49-51 - Doug Schuler:
Computer professionals and the next culture of democracy. 52-57 - John A. Taylor, Eleanor Burt:
Not-for-profits in the democratic polity. 58-62 - Todd M. La Porte, Chris C. Demchak, Christian Friis:
Webbing governance: global trends across national-level public agencies. 63-67
- Lance J. Hoffman, Lorrie Faith Cranor:
Internet voting for public officials: introduction. 69-71 - Joe Mohen, Julia Glidden:
The case for internet voting. 72-85 - Deborah M. Phillips, Hans A. von Spakovsky:
Gauging the risks of internet elections. 73-85
- Gordon Bell:
A personal digital store. 86-91 - Thomas M. Chen:
Increasing the observability of Internet behavior. 93-98 - Abhijit Chaudhury, Debasish Mallick, H. Raghav Rao:
Web channels in e-commerce. 99-104
- Simon N. Foley, Robert Dumigan:
Are handheld viruses a significant threat? 105-107
- Rebecca Mercuri, Peter G. Neumann:
System integrity revisited. 160
Volume 44, Number 2, February 2001
- Diane Crawford:
Editorial Pointers. 5 - Robert Fox:
News Track. 9-10 - Diane Crawford:
Forum. 11-13
- Peter J. Denning:
Who Are We? 15-19
- Meg McGinity:
Name is the Game. 21-23
- Steven Bellman, Eric J. Johnson, Gerald L. Lohse:
To Opt-In or Opt-Out? It Depends on the Question. 25-27
- Imran Bashir, Enrico Serafini, Kevin Wall:
Securing network software applications: introduction. 28-20 - John Viega, Tadayoshi Kohno, Bruce Potter:
Trust (and mistrust) in secure applications. 31-36 - James Joshi, Walid G. Aref, Arif Ghafoor, Eugene H. Spafford:
Security models for web-based applications. 38-44 - David M. Martin Jr., Richard M. Smith, Michael Brittain, Ivan Fetch, Hailin Wu:
The privacy practices of web browser extensions. 45-50 - Anup K. Ghosh, Tara M. Swaminatha:
Software security and privacy risks in mobile e-commerce. 51-57 - Chris I. Dalton, Tse Huong Choo:
An operating system approach to securing e-services. 58-64
- Pamela Samuelson:
Intellectual property for an information age: introduction. 66-68 - Dan L. Burk:
Copyrightable functions and patentable speech. 69-75 - Randall Davis:
The digital dilemma. 77-83 - Yochai Benkler:
The battle over the institutional ecosystem in the digital environment. 84-90 - A. Michael Froomkin:
The collision of trademarks, domain names, and due process in cyberspace. 91-97 - Maureen A. O'Rourke:
Is virtual trespass an apt analogy? 98-103
- Peter G. Neumann:
What to know about risks. 136
Volume 44, Number 3, March 2001
- Diane Crawford:
Editorial Pointers. 5 - Robert Fox:
News track. 9-10
- Phillip G. Armour:
Software as Currency. 13-14
- Hal Berghel:
A cyberpublishing manifesto. 17-20
- Gordon Bell, Jim Gray:
Digital immortality. 28-31 - Rita R. Colwell:
Closing the circle of information technology. 31-32 - Norman I. Badler:
Virtual beings. 33-35 - Donald A. Norman:
Cyborgs. 36-37 - Ramesh C. Jain:
Digital experience. 38-40 - Joseph Jacobson:
The desktop fab. 41-43 - Dan Bricklin:
Look to the past to envision the future. 44 - Ted Selker:
Affecting humanity. 45 - Leon A. Kappelman:
The future is ours. 46-47 - V. Michael Bove Jr.:
Astronauts and mosquitoes. 48-49 - Andries van Dam:
User interfaces: disappearing, dissolving, and evolving. 50-52 - Eric A. Brewer:
When everything is searchable. 53-55 - Martin Cooper:
Bandwidth and the creation of awareness. 55-57 - Thomas A. Horan:
The paradox of place. 58-59 - Ronald J. Vetter:
The wireless web. 60-61 - Usama M. Fayyad:
The digital physics of data mining. 62-65 - Jennifer C. Lai:
When computers speak, hear, and understand. 66-67 - Jim Waldo:
When the network is everything. 68-69 - Steven J. Schwartz:
Wearables in 2048. 70-71 - Cameron Miner:
Pushing functionality into even smaller devices. 72-73 - Christopher R. Johnson:
Computational bioimaging for medical diagnosis and treatment. 74-76 - Jacques Cohen:
Computers and biology. 76-77 - Thomas L. Sterling:
Continuum computer architecture for exaflops computation. 78-80 - Jon Crowcroft:
Never lost, never forgotten. 81 - Michael J. Muller, Ellen Christiansen, Bonnie A. Nardi, Susan M. Dray:
Spiritual life and information technology. 82-83 - Whitfield Diffie:
Ultimate cryptography. 84-86
- Raymond Kurzweil:
Promise and peril-the deeply intertwined poles of 21st century technology. 88-91 - Edsger W. Dijkstra:
The end of computing science? 92 - Hal R. Varian:
The computer-mediated economy. 93 - Robert X. Cringely:
Be absolute for death: life after Moore's law. 94 - Brock N. Meeks:
Accountability through transparency;: life in 2050. 96-97 - Pamela Samuelson:
Toward a new politics of intellectual property. 98-99 - Dennis Tsichritzis:
Forget the past to win the future. 100-101 - Andrew Grosso:
The demise of sovereignty. 102-103 - Anthony M. Townsend, James T. Bennett:
Electronic empire. 104-106 - Ari Schwartz:
A larger role in the public policy process for user control. 106-107 - Karen Holtzblatt:
Inventing the future. 108-110 - Richard M. Stallman:
Can freedom withstand e-books? 111 - Peter J. Denning:
Many zeros ahead. 112-113 - Bruce Schneier:
Insurance and the computer industry. 114-115
- Kilnam Chon:
The future of the internet digital divide. 116-117 - Grady Booch:
Developing the future. 118-121 - Henry Lieberman, Christopher Fry:
Will software ever work? 122-124 - Ann Winblad, Mark Gorenberg:
A just-in-time software-based world. 125 - Larry L. Constantine:
Back to the future. 126-129 - Cherri M. Pancake:
The ubiquitous beauty of user-aware software. 130 - Steven M. Bellovin:
Computer security - an end state? 131-132 - Doug Riecken:
A commonsense opportunity for computing. 132-133 - Ravi Ganesan:
Keep (over)reaching for the stars. 134-135
- John Glenn:
Education is the key to future dreams. 136-138 - Anita Borg:
Universal literacy - a challenge for computing in the 21st Century. 139-141 - Roger C. Schank:
The computer isn't the medium, it's the message. 142-143 - Mitchel Resnick:
Closing the fluency gap. 144-145
- Peter G. Neumann, David Lorge Parnas:
Computers: boon or bane? 168
Volume 44, Number 4, April 2001
- Diane Crawford:
Editorial Pointers. 5 - Robert Fox:
News Track. 9-10 - Diane Crawford:
Forum: Participatory Vs. Representative Democracy. 13-15
- Robert L. Glass:
Practical programmer: academics, and the scarlet letter "A". 17-18
- Peter J. Denning:
Crossing the Chasm. 21-25
- David L. Lanning:
On bias, science, equal protection, and liability. 27-29
- Sahin Albayrak:
Agent-oriented technology for telecommunications: introduction. 30-33 - Nicholas R. Jennings:
An agent-based approach for building complex software systems. 35-41 - Stefan Fricke, Karsten Bsufka, Jan Keiser, Torge Schmidt, Ralf Sesseler, Sahin Albayrak:
Agent-based telematic services and telecom applications. 43-48 - Munindar P. Singh, Bin Yu, Mahadevan Venkatraman:
Community-based service location. 49-54 - Marcus Brunner, Bernhard Plattner, Rolf Stadler:
Service creation and management in active telecom networks. 55-61 - Francisco Valera, Jorge E. López de Vergara, José Ignacio Moreno, Víctor A. Villagrá, Julio Berrocal:
Communication management experiences in e-commerce. 63-69 - Mike P. Papazoglou:
Agent-oriented technology in support of e-business. 71-77
- Varun Grover, James T. C. Teng:
E-commerce and the information market. 79-86 - Mark Keil, Daniel Robey:
Blowing the whistle on troubled software projects. 87-93 - Tanya L. Cheyne, Frank E. Ritter:
Targeting audiences on the internet. 94-98 - Gerti Kappel, Stefan Rausch-Schott, Werner Retschitzegger, Markku Sakkinen:
Bottom-up design of active object-oriented databases. 99-104
- Robert P. Ward, Mohamed Fayad, Mauri Laitinen:
Software process improvement in the small. 105-107
- Bruce Schneier:
Cyber underwriters lab. 128
Volume 44, Number 5, May 2001
- Diane Crawford:
Editorial Pointers. 5 - Robert Fox:
News Track. 9-10 - Diane Crawford:
Forum: Evolving commitment to the profession of computer science. 11-12
- Neil Munro:
The unhappy but beneficial coexistence of the FBI and the tech elite. 15-18
- Hal Berghel:
Caustic Cookies. 19-22
- Alan Howard:
Software engineering project management. 23-24
- Krzysztof R. Apt:
Viewpoint: One more revolution to make: free scientific publishing. 25-28
- Edward A. Fox, Gary Marchionini:
Digital libraries: Introduction. 30-32 - Gregory R. Crane, Robert F. Chavez, Anne Mahoney, Thomas L. Milbank, Jeffrey A. Rydberg-Cox, David A. Smith, Clifford E. Wulfman:
Drudgery and deep thought. 34-40 - Craig G. Nevill-Manning:
The biological digital library. 41-42 - Alan S. Inouye:
A digital strategy for the library of congress. 43 - Paul Jones:
Open (source)ing the doors for contributor-run digital libraries. 45-46 - Ian H. Witten, David Bainbridge, Stefan J. Boddie:
Greenstone: Open-source DL software. 47 - Alexa T. McCray, Marie E. Gallagher:
Principles for digital library development. 48-54 - Catherine C. Marshall, Gene Golovchinsky, Morgan N. Price:
Digital libraries and mobility. 55-56 - Michael S. Brown, W. Brent Seales, Stephen B. Webb, Christopher O. Jaynes:
Building large-format displays for digital libraries. 57-59 - Michael L. Nelson, Kurt Maly:
Buckets: smart objects for digital libraries. 60-62 - Henry M. Gladney, Arthur Cantu:
Authorization management for digital libraries. 63-65 - Christine L. Borgman:
Where is the librarian in the digital library? 66-68 - William Y. Arms:
Uniform resource names: handles, PURLs, and digital object identifiers. 68 - Helen R. Tibbo:
Archival perspectives on the emerging digital library. 69-70 - Erik Duval, Eddy Forte, Kris Cardinaels, Bart Verhoeven, Rafaël Van Durm, Koen Hendrikx, Maria Wentland Forte, Norbert Ebel, Maciej Macowicz, Ken Warkentyne, Florence Haenni:
The Ariadne knowledge pool system. 72-78 - David McArthur, Sarah Giersch, Bill Graves, Charles R. Ward, Richard Dillaman, Russell L. Herman, Gabriel G. Lugo, James H. Reeves, Ronald J. Vetter, Deborah Knox, G. Scott Owen:
Toward a sharable digital library of reusable teaching resources. 79 - Mary Marlino, Tamara Sumner, David Fulker, Cathryn Manduca, David Mogk:
The digital library for earth system education: building community, building the library. 80-81 - Ian H. Witten, Michel Loots, Maria F. Trujillo, David Bainbridge:
The promise of digital libraries in developing countries. 82-85 - Lee L. Zia:
The NSF national science, mathematics, engineering, and technology education digital library program. 83 - Mark D. Apperley, Sally Jo Cunningham, Te Taka Keegan, Ian H. Witten:
NIUPEPA: a historical newspaper collection. 86-87 - Shalini R. Urs, K. S. Raghavan:
Vidyanidhi: Indian digital library of electronic theses. 88-89 - Bernard Rous:
The ACM digital library. 90-91
- Greg Baster, Prabhudev Konana, Judy E. Scott:
Business components: a case study of bankers trust Australia limited. 92-98 - Mark Astley, Daniel C. Sturman, Gul Agha:
Customizable middleware for modular distributed software. 99-107 - Joanne McGrath Cohoon:
Toward improving female retention in the computer science major. 108-114
- Lauren Weinstein:
Be seeing you! 128
Volume 44, Number 6, June 2001
- Diane Crawford:
Editorial Pointers. 5 - Robert Fox:
News track. 9-10 - Diane Crawford:
Forum. 11-14
- Elliot Soloway, Cathleen A. Norris, Phyllis Blumenfeld, Barry Fishman, Joseph Krajcik, Ronald Marx:
Log on education: Handheld devices are ready-at-hand. 15-20
- Seymour E. Goodman, James B. Gottstein, Diane S. Goodman:
Wiring the wilderness in Alaska and the Yukon. 21-26
- Paul De Palma:
Why women avoid computer science. 27-30
- Rajiv M. Dewan, Abraham Seidmann:
Current issues in e-banking: introduction. 31-32 - Kemal Saatcioglu, Jan Stallaert, Andrew B. Whinston:
Design of a financial portal. 33-38 - Yoram (Jerry) Wind:
The challenge of "customerization" in financial services. 39-44 - Kemal Altinkemer:
Bundling e-banking services. 45-47 - Niv Ahituv:
The open information society. 48-52 - Christopher P. Holland, John B. Westwood:
Product-market and technology strategies in banking. 53-57
- Kuldeep Kumar:
Technology for supporting supply chain management: introduction. 58-61 - Steve John Simon:
The art of military logistics. 62-66 - Bill Welty, Irma Becerra-Fernandez:
Managing trust and commitment in collaborative supply chain relationships. 67-73 - Rob A. Zuidwijk, Jo van Nunen, Diana van Eijk, Jos van Hillegersberg:
Supporting return flows in the supply chain. 74-79 - Girish Ramachandran, Sanjay Tiwari:
Challenges in the air cargo supply chain. 80-82 - R. Krishnan:
Technology in the Indian retail supply chain. 83-87
- David Schuff, Robert D. St. Louis:
Centralization vs. decentralization of application software. 88-94 - Gary Klein, James J. Jiang, Marion G. Sobol:
A new view of IS personnel performance evaluation. 95-102 - Terry Shepard, Margaret Anne Lamb, Diane Kelly:
More testing should be taught. 103-108
- Michael McCormick:
Programming extremism. 109-119
- Richard Forno, William Feinbloom:
PKI: a question of trust and value. 120
Volume 44, Number 7, July 2001
- Diane Crawford:
Editorial pointers. 5 - Robert Fox:
News track. 9-10 - Diane Crawford:
Forum. 11-13 - John White:
ACM Opens portal. 14-16, 28 - Diane Crawford:
ACM general elections. 54
- Andrew Grosso:
The individual in the new age. 17-20
- Phillip G. Armour:
Matching process to types of teams. 21-23
- Quentin Stafford-Fraser:
The life and times of the first Web Cam. 25-26
- Scott Hazelhurst:
Viewpoint: Developing IT skills internationally: who's developing whom?. 27-28
- David Arnold, Fred Niederman:
The global IT work force: Introduction. 30-33 - Lawrence A. West, Walter A. Bogumil:
Immigration and the global IT work force. 34-38 - Phalguni Gupta:
Growth scenario of IT industries in India. 40-41 - Keith Mander:
The decline and fall of the American programmer. 43-44 - Liisa von Hellens, Sue H. Nielsen:
Australian women in IT0. 46-52 - Philip J. Sallis:
Some thoughts on IT employment in New Zealand. 53-54 - Linda Marshall:
A perspective on the IT industry in South Africa. 55 - Ritu Agarwal, Thomas W. Ferratt:
Crafting an HR strategy to meet the need for IT workers. 58-64 - Kam-Fai Wong:
Labor shortfall in Hong Kong's IT industry. 65-66 - Maria M. Klawe:
Refreshing the nerds. 67-68 - Jo Ellen Moore, Susan E. Yager, Mary Sumner, Galen B. Crow:
Facilitating career changes into IT. 70-73 - Eileen M. Trauth:
Mapping information-sector work to the work force. 74-75 - Wang Shan:
The IT work force in China. 76 - Vladimir V. Anishchenko:
The IT staffing situation in Belarus. 77-78
- Steve Benford, Chris Greenhalgh, Tom Rodden, James Pycock:
Collaborative virtual environments. 79-85 - Karim K. Hirji:
Exploring data mining implementation. 87-93 - Vincent S. Lai:
Intraorganizational communication with intranets. 95-100
- James J. Horning:
Learning from experience. 112
Volume 44, Number 8, August 2001
- Diane Crawford:
Editorial pointers. 5 - Robert Fox:
News track. 9-10 - Diane Crawford:
Forum. 11-13
- Hal Berghel:
The Y2K e-commerce tumble. 15-17
- Peter J. Denning:
The IT schools movement. 19-22
- David S. Touretzky:
Free speech rights for programmers. 23-25 - Eric M. Freedman:
Viewpoint: Pondering pixelized pixies. 27-29
- Nahum D. Gershon, Ward Page:
What storytelling can do for information visualization. 31-37 - Daniel A. Keim:
Visual exploration of large data sets. 38-44 - Stephen G. Eick:
Visualizing online activity. 45-50 - Fred Mintzer, Gordon W. Braudaway, Francis P. Giordano, Jack C. Lee, Karen A. Magerlein, Silvana D'Auria, Amnon Ribak, Gil Shapir, Fabio Schiattarella, John Tolva, Andrey Zelenkov:
Populating the Hermitage Museum's new web site. 52-60 - Calvin K. M. Lam, Bernard C. Y. Tan:
The Internet is changing the music industry. 62-68 - Henry Lieberman, Christopher Fry, Louis Weitzman:
Exploring the Web with reconnaissance agents. 69-75 - Nong Ye, Joseph Giordano, John Feldman:
A process control approach to cyber attack detection. 76-82 - John Benamati, Albert L. Lederer:
Coping with rapid changes in IT. 83-88
- Albert Levi, Çetin Kaya Koç:
Risks in email security. 112
Volume 44, Number 9, September 2001
- Diane Crawford:
Editorial pointers. 5 - Robert Fox:
News track. 9-10 - Diane Crawford:
Forum. 11
- Robert L. Glass:
Of Model Changeovers, Style, and Fatware. 17-18
- Meg McGinity:
Siut Yourselt. Commun. ACM 44(9): 21-23 (2001)
- Jane C. Ginsburg:
What to Know Before Reissuing Old Titles as E-Books. 25-27
- Nikolaos A. Mylonopoulos, Vasilis Theoharakis:
Global Perception of IS Journals. 29-33
- Vinton G. Cerf:
Beyond the Post-PC Internet. 34-37 - Adrian Hooke:
The interplanetary Internet. 38-40 - Leonard Kleinrock:
Breaking loose. 41-45 - José A. Corrales:
An Asturian view of networking 2015. 47-54 - Lada A. Adamic, Bernardo A. Huberman:
The Web's hidden order. 55-59 - Mark Weiser:
Whatever happened to the next-generation Internet? 61-68
- Lawrence A. Gordon, Martin P. Loeb:
Using information security as a response to competitor analysis systems. 70-75 - Alvin T. S. Chan, Jiannong Cao, Henry C. B. Chan, Gilbert H. Young:
A web-enabled framework for smart card applications in health services. 76-82 - Glenn B. Bell, Anil Sethi:
Matching records in a national medical patient index. 83-88 - Terry L. Huston:
Security issues for implementation of e-medical records. 89-94
- Mohamed E. Fayad, Adam Altman:
An Introduction to Software Stability. 95-98
Volume 44, Number 10, October 2001
- Diane Crawford:
Editorial Pointers. 5 - Robert Fox:
News Track. 9-10 - Diane Crawford:
Forum. 11-12
- Phillip G. Armour:
Zeppelins and jet planes: a metaphor for modern software projects. 13-15
- Neil Munro:
Considering the broadband debate. 17-19
- Keith Devlin:
The real reason why software engineers need math. 21-22 - Barbara Simons:
The ACM declaration in Felten v. RIAA. 23-26
- Tzilla Elrad, Robert E. Filman, Atef Bader:
Aspect-oriented programming - introduction. 29-32 - Tzilla Elrad, Mehmet Aksit, Gregor Kiczales, Karl J. Lieberherr, Harold Ossher:
Discussing aspects of AOP. 33-38 - Karl J. Lieberherr, Doug Orleans, Johan Ovlinger:
Aspect-oriented programming with adaptive methods. 39-41 - Harold Ossher, Peri L. Tarr:
Using multidimensional separation of concerns to (re)shape evolving software. 43-50 - Lodewijk Bergmans, Mehmet Aksit:
Composing crosscutting concerns using composition filters. 51-57 - Gregor Kiczales, Erik Hilsdale, Jim Hugunin, Mik Kersten, Jeffrey Palm, William G. Griswold:
Getting started with ASPECTJ. 59-65 - J. Andrés Díaz Pace, Marcelo R. Campo:
Analyzing the role of aspects in software design. 66-73 - Gail C. Murphy, Robert J. Walker, Elisa L. A. Baniassad, Martin P. Robillard, Albert Lai, Mik Kersten:
Does aspect-oriented programming work? 75-77 - Yvonne Coady, Gregor Kiczales, Michael J. Feeley, Norman C. Hutchinson, Joon Suan Ong:
Structuring operating system aspects. 79-82 - Paniti Netinant, Tzilla Elrad, Mohamed Fayad:
A layered approach to building open aspect-oriented systems. 83-85 - Jeff Gray, Ted Bapty, Sandeep Neema, James Tuck:
Handling crosscutting constraints in domain-specific modeling. 87-93 - Gregory T. Sullivan:
Aspect-oriented programming using reflection and metaobject protocols. 95-97
- Cherri M. Pancake, Christian Lengauer:
High-performance Java - introduction. 98-101 - José E. Moreira, Samuel P. Midkiff, Manish Gupta, Pedro V. Artigas, Peng Wu, George Almási:
The NINJA project. 102-109 - Thilo Kielmann, Philip J. Hatcher, Luc Bougé, Henri E. Bal:
Enabling Java for high-performance computing. 110-117 - Vladimir Getov, Gregor von Laszewski, Michael Philippsen, Ian T. Foster:
Multiparadigm communications in Java for grid computing. 118-125
- Henry F. Ledgard:
The emperor with no clothes. 126-128 - Ralph Westfall:
Hello, World considered harmful. 129-130
- Stephan Somogyi, Bruce Schneier:
The perils of port 80. 168
Volume 44, Number 11, November 2001
- Diane Crawford:
Editorial Pointers. 5 - Robert Fox:
News Track. 9-10 - Diane Crawford:
Forum. 11-15
- Brock N. Meeks:
Blanking on Rebellion: Where the Future is "Nabster". 17-20
- Peter J. Denning, Robert Dunham:
The Core of the Third-Wave Professional. 21-25
- Francine Berman:
From TeraGrid to Knowledge Grid. 27-28
- Albert Huang:
Innovative Use of Email for Teaching. 29-32
- Brad A. Myers:
Using handhelds and PCs together. 34-41 - Ravi Bapna, Paulo B. Góes, Alok Gupta:
Insights and Analyses of Online Auctions. 42-50 - Michael Ettredge, Vernon J. Richardson, Susan Scholz:
A Web Site Design Model for Financial Information. 51-56 - Alina M. Chircu, Robert J. Kauffman, Doug Keskey:
Maximizing the Value of Internet-based Corporate Travel Reservation Systems. 57-63 - John Gray:
The End of Career. 65-69 - John Backus:
Funding the Computing Revolution's Third Wave. 70-76 - Nicholas Carriero, David Gelernter:
A Computational Model of Everything. 77-81 - Mark Burgin:
How We Know What Technology Can Do. 82-88 - Henry C. Lucas Jr.:
Information Technology and Physical Space. 89-96 - Steve Sawyer:
A market-based perspective on information systems development. 97-102 - Lauren Weinstein, Peter G. Neumann:
Inside Risks: Risks of Panic. 152
Volume 44, Number 12, December 2001
- Diane Crawford:
Editorial Pointers. 5 - Robert Fox:
News Track. 9-10 - Diane Crawford:
Forum. 11-13
- Hal Berghel:
The Code Red Worm. 15-19
- Roger C. Schank:
Revolutionizing the Traditional Classroom Course. 21-24
- Ka-Ping Yee:
Operating an Emergency Information Service. 25-28 - Jon M. Peha:
The Growing Debate Over Science and Technology Advice for Congress. 29-31
- Vir V. Phoha:
The DMCA Needs Fixing. 33-34
- Zakaria Maamar, Eric Dorion, Catherine Daigle:
Toward Virtual Marketplaces for E-Commerce Support. 35-38
- James M. Ragusa, Grace M. Bochenek:
Collaborative Virtual Design Environments: Introduction. 40-43 - Randall C. Smith:
Shared Vision. 45-48 - R. Bowen Loftin:
Design Engineering in Virtual Environments. 49-50 - Mark T. Maybury:
Collaborative Virtual Environments for Analysis and Decision Support. 51-54 - Mark T. Maybury, Raymond J. D'Amore, David House:
Expert Finding for Collaborative Virtual Environments. 55-56 - Simon Su, R. Bowen Loftin:
A Shared Virtual Environment for Exploring and Designing Molecules. 57-58 - Imre Horváth, Zoltán Rusák:
Collaborative Shape Conceptualization in Virtual Design Environments. 59-63 - Cristian Luciano, Pat P. Banerjee, Sanjay Mehrotra:
3D Animation of Telecollaborative Anthropomorphic Avatars. 64-67
- Robert M. Davison, Gert-Jan de Vreede:
Global Applications of Collaborative Technology: Introduction. 68-70 - Line Dubé, Guy Paré:
Global Virtual Teams. 71-73 - Sue Newell, Shan Ling Pan, Robert D. Galliers, Jimmy C. Huang:
The Myth of the Boundaryless Organization. 74-76 - Séamas Kelly, Matthew Jones:
Groupware and the Social Infrastructure of Communication. 77-79 - Gerardine DeSanctis, Matthew Wright, Lu Jiang:
Building A Global Learning Community. 80-82 - Anne P. Massey, Mitzi M. Montoya-Weiss, Yu-Ting Caisy Hung, Venkataraman Ramesh:
Cultural Perceptions of Task-Technology Fit. 83-84 - Sajda Qureshi, Ilze Zigurs:
Paradoxes and Prerogatives in Global Virtual Collaboration. 85-88 - J. Roberto Evaristo:
Nonconsensual Negotiation in Distributed Collaboration. 89
- Ram D. Gopal, Zhiping D. Walter, Arvind K. Tripathi:
Admediation: New Horizons in Effective Email Advertising. 91-96 - Eric J. Glover, Steve Lawrence, Michael D. Gordon, William P. Birmingham, C. Lee Giles:
Web Search - Your Way. 97-102 - J. Leon Zhao, Vincent H. Resh:
Internet Publishing and Transformation of Knowledge Processes. 103-109
- Peter G. Neumann, Lauren Weinstein:
Risks of National Identity Cards. 176
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