págs. 9-10
pág. 9
pág. 9
pág. 9
pág. 10
pág. 10
pág. 10
pág. 10
pág. 10
Using technology to address old problems in new ways
Elliot Soloway, Cathie Norris
págs. 11-18
Shaping public policy in the information age
Diane Crawford
págs. 21-24
Did Chuck Babbage predict software piracy?
Roger A. Coldwell
págs. 25-27
Information systems and economics
Frederick J. Riggins, Robert Kauffman
págs. 32-34
págs. 35-42
Internet service providers, proprietary content, and the battle for users' dollars
Rajiv M. Dewan, Marshall L. Freimer
págs. 43-48
Beyond the productivity paradox
Erik Brynjolfsson, Lorin M. Hitt
págs. 49-55
International dimensions of the productivity paradox
Sanjeev Dewan, Kenneth L. Kraemer
págs. 56-62
págs. 63-66
Evaluating the cost of software quality
Sandra A. Slaughter, Donald E. Harter
págs. 67-73
Lorrie Faith Cranor, Brian A. LaMacchia
págs. 74-83
Web-based development of complex information products
E. James Whitehead Jr., Roy T. Fielding
págs. 84-92
The case for user-centered CASE tools
Stan Jarzabek, Riri Huang
págs. 93-99
Effective distribution of object-oriented applications
Hemant Jain, Sandeep Purao
págs. 100-108
Achieving bottom-line improvements with enterprise frameworks
David S. Hamu, Mohamed E. Fayad
págs. 110-113
Computer science and software engineering: Filing for divorce?
Peter J. Denning
pág. 128
© 2001-2024 Fundación Dialnet · Todos los derechos reservados