default search action
Ubiquity, Volume 2000
Volume 2000, Number February, February 2000
- John Gehl:
Lessons in life from the Net: Chatting with Vint Cerf. 1 - Gordon Bell:
Dear Appy, how committed are you? Signed, lost and forgotten data. 2 - Catherine M. Beise, Martha E. Myers:
What IT labor shortage?: redefining the IT in 'IT professional'. 3 - Robert S. Tannenbaum, Joanne M. Badagliacco:
Multimedia and gender. 4 - Virginia Postrel:
The future and its enemies (book excerpts). 5 - John Gehl:
Building community for the new information technology professional: an interview with John White. 6 - Michael Schrage:
Mirrorware. 7 - M. E. Kabay:
Distributed denial-of-service attacks, contributory negligence and downstream liability. 8 - Simson L. Garfinkel:
Database nation (book excerpts). 9
Volume 2000, Number March, March 2000
- John Gehl:
Understanding in the age of also: talking with Richard Saul Wurman. 1 - Don Tapscott, David Ticoll, Alex Lowy:
The rise of business webs. 2 - Michael M. Roberts:
Code and the Internet. 3 - Frederick Levine, Chris Locke, David Searls, David Weinberger:
The cluetrain manifesto (book excerpts: the end of business as usual. 4 - John Gehl:
New tools, new teaching for a different kind of student: an interview with Don Norman. 5 - Robert C. Heterick:
Through a glass, darkly. 6 - Kenneth G. Robinson:
The benefits of privacy invasion. 7 - John Gehl:
The future of the IT profession: an interview with Peter Denning. 8 - William Paul Fiefer:
Domain-nation. 9 - John C. Thomas:
What is the story of the 21st century? 10 - John Seely Brown, Paul Duguid:
The social life of information (book excerpt). 11 - John Gehl:
Dot to dot-com: talking with Donna Hoffman. 12 - Jeremy J. Shapiro:
Acquiring digital wealth - the underlying cultural principles. 13 - William H. Graves:
The dot.xxx challenge to education and training. 14
Volume 2000, Number April, April 2000
- John Gehl:
Why 99.9 percent is not good enough: an interview with Peter Huber. 1 - As a man grows older. 2
- Nancy M. Dixon:
Common knowledge (book excerpt): how companies thrive by sharing what they know. 3 - John Gehl:
Organizations and technology: an interview with Paul Duguid. 4 - Martin Raish:
What about the library? 5 - James A. Anderson, Edward Rosenfeld:
Talking Nets (book excerpts): an oral history of neural networks. 6 - John Gehl:
Reader comments: letter on ageism. 7 - John Gehl:
Common knowledge: an interview with Nancy Dixon. 8 - R. W. Burniske:
Arabia online: answering the call of the holy land. 9 - John Gehl:
Academia, tele-information, and the network of networks: a conversation with Eli Noam. 10 - Joseph M. Newcomer:
Deconstructing the Internet paradox. 11 - Paula B. Hawthorn:
Letter on ageism: thoughts on the supposed IT worker shortage. 12
Volume 2000, Number May, May 2000
- John Gehl:
CyberAll: everywhere and forever, an interview with Gordon Bell. 1 - R. Raghuraman:
India: is IT the future? 2 - Jeff Johnson:
GUI bloopers (book excerpt): don't's and do's for software developers and Web designers. 3 - John Gehl:
Education in the new hi-tech world. 4 - Ephraim L. Michael:
Electronic signature legislation. 5 - R. W. Burniske:
Literacy in the cyber age. 6 - Peter G. Neumann:
Risks in our information infrastructures. 7 - Marcia C. Linn:
Partners in learning. 8 - Don Tapscott, David Ticoll, Alex Lowy:
Digital capital: harnessing the power of business Webs. 9 - John Gehl:
Reader comments. 10 - Arthur Melmed:
The untried approach. 11 - John Gehl:
A call for early intervention: interview with Bill Joy. 12 - Jef Raskin:
The humane interface (book excerpt). 13 - Lewis J. Perelman:
Stay tuned for the "new" economy. 14 - William Paul Fiefer:
Heavy rotation. 15 - John Gehl:
Reader comments. 16
Volume 2000, Number June, June 2000
- Peter G. Neumann:
Certitude and rectitude. 1 - John Gehl:
Searching for the sweet spot: jamming with John Kao. 2 - John Gehl:
Reader comments: PGP Signatures for Electronic Documents? 3 - C. Celeste Creswell:
Arbitration clauses in online agreements. 4 - M. E. Kabay:
A new recruit writes home from boot camp. 5 - John Gehl:
Reader comments: So-Called High Tech Solutions. 6 - Marsha Woodbury:
The bout of the century?: information ethics vs. E-commerce. 7 - John Gehl:
The ongoing evolution of scientific supercomputing. 8 - Samuel Chong, Kecheng Liu:
The social aspects neglected in e-commerce. 9 - John Gehl:
Where do we go from here?: Bob Metcalfe talks about life, luck and choices. 10 - John Gehl:
Reader comments: Will the Real MS Customer Please Stand Up? 11
Volume 2000, Number July, July 2000
- John Gehl:
Nanotechnology: designs for the future. 1 - John Gehl:
Reader comments. 2 - Carol A. Twigg:
Distance education: an oxymoron? 3 - Bill Hanson:
Internet virus protection. 4 - Question time: what should be done about the 'digital divide'? 5
- John Gehl:
Question time: Napster. 6 - Where have all the faculty gone? 7
- Question time: online privacy. 8
Volume 2000, Number August, August 2000
- Bernard Goldbach:
Just turn me off. 1 - Robert S. Tannenbaum:
Theoretical foundations of multimedia. 2 - Louis V. Gerstner:
Question time: organizational shake-ups. 3 - Leon Rogson, Mary Forsht-Tucker, Gene Sheppard:
Question time: online privacy. 4 - R. Raghuraman:
Caught them, but how to hold them? 5 - Thomas H. Davenport, Lawrence Prusak:
Working knowledge: how organizations manage what they know. 6 - Craig E. Ward, Alan Lawson:
Question time: true leadership. 7 - James A. Dewar:
The information age and the printing press: looking backward to see ahead. 8 - M. E. Kabay:
Monty Python's flying circus: Microsoft and the aircraft carriers. 9 - M. Grundy:
Question time?: global village or global police station? 10 - John Gehl, Suzanne Douglas, Peter J. Denning, Robin Perry:
Question time: true leadership. 11 - John Gehl:
Reader comments: working knowledge. 12 - Jeanine L. Gibbs:
The digital millennium Copyright Act. 13 - Dorothy E. Denning:
Hacktivism and other net crimes. 14 - M. Grundy:
Question time: global village or global police station? 15 - John Gehl:
Readers comments: knowledge management accelerates learning. 16 - Ben Shneiderman:
Universal Usability. 17 - John Gehl:
What's New?: talking with inventor Bob Olodort. 18 - John Gehl:
Reader Comments: semantics aside, 'knowledge' can be managed. 19
Volume 2000, Number September, September 2000
- M. E. Kabay:
May the power be with you: a design philosophy for software engineers. 1 - William A. Wulf:
The nature of engineering, the science of humanities, and Godel's theorem. 2 - John Gehl:
Reader comments: putting pretentious pontificators on notice. 3 - Giovanna Avellis:
The ERMES approach to software evaluation. 4 - Phil Smith:
Collective control. 5 - Richard J. Cox:
The information age and history: looking backward to see us. 6 - Kirk Templeton:
Reader comments: the complete computer scientist. 7
Volume 2000, Number October, October 2000
- Shannon Jacobs:
We, the Internet. 1 - John Gehl, Ben Shneiderman:
Credit for computer crashes?: creative solutions to usability problems can serve all users. 2 - John Gehl, Gary Hamel:
Revolutionizing the corporate culture. 3 - Richard T. Watson:
U-commerce: the ultimate. 4 - Dan Bricklin:
The software police vs. the CD lawyers. 5 - Robert S. Tannenbaum:
Multimedia developers can learn from the history of human communication. 6 - Doug Isenberg:
Presidential politics and internet issues in the 2000 election. 7 - Daniel Uhlfelder:
Electronic signatures and the new economy. 8 - Robert C. Heterick, John Gehl:
Educational mind shift. 9
Volume 2000, Number November, November 2000
- Daniel Uhlfelder:
UCITA: coming to a statehouse near you. 1 - Joseph M. Newcomer:
Barriers to mentoring. 2 - Virginia Postrel:
There's no going back. 3 - Andrew Rafalski:
The road to encryption: smart card ID: But can it remember my passwords? 4 - John Gehl:
Taking stock of the tech industry: talking with Denise Caruso, industry analyst and founder of Hybrid Vigor Institute. 5 - David Curle:
Making matters worse: what problem is ICANN trying to solve? 6 - M. O. Thirunarayanan:
Cutting down on chat confusion: a proposal for managing instructor-controlled chat systems. 7
Volume 2000, Number December, December 2000
- Daniel W. Uhlfelder:
The new economy: are rules irrelevant? 1 - Patrick Walsh, Adamantios Koumpis:
Managing information supply chains. 2 - Edmund B. Burke:
A dialogue on local interests and national commerce. 3 - Mihai Nadin:
Anticipatory computing. 4 - Greg Farman:
Guide to the internet. 5 - Kerry Northrup:
Tomorrow's news. 6
manage site settings
To protect your privacy, all features that rely on external API calls from your browser are turned off by default. You need to opt-in for them to become active. All settings here will be stored as cookies with your web browser. For more information see our F.A.Q.