Harvard University. Program on Information Resources Policy
Harvard University Cambridge, Mass Program on Information Resources Policy
Program on Information Resources Policy
VIAF ID: 123769001 ( Corporate )
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/123769001
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- 110 2 _ ‡a Harvard University ‡b Program on Information Resources Policy
- 110 2 _ ‡a Harvard University. Program on Information Resources Policy
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- 110 2 0 ‡a Harvard University. ‡b Program on Information Resources Policy
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4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (8)
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- 551 _ _ ‡a Cambridge, Mass.
- 510 2 _ ‡a Harvard University Cambridge, Mass
- 510 2 _ ‡a Harvard University ‡e Ueberordnung
Works
Title | Sources |
---|---|
Alternative telecommunications costing methods : fundamentals and discretion : a fixed allocator separations model | |
Arms control verification, c1986: | |
At the heart of evolving literacy : a framework for action | |
Canadian cultural nationalism in an increasingly universalized North American market : a focus on the book publishing industry | |
Cellular phones : is there really competition? | |
The challenges for value-added services in Korea | |
Chronology of telecommunications and cable ... c1984 | |
Coalition command and control : key considerations | |
Command and control--readings and commentary (revised) | |
The common byte, or, Why excellent information technology standards are both absolutely essential and utterly impossible : summary version | |
The common market for telecommunications and information services | |
Competition and cooperation : from biology to business regulation | |
Competition in local distribution, c1983: | |
Competition in the financial industry : who can survive? | |
Computers and literacy : redefining each other | |
Congressional testimonies, July 1983-April 1990 | |
Connecting to the home : alternatives for the last mile | |
Cooperation meets competition : the impact of consortia for precompetitive R&D in the computer industry, 1982-92 | |
Cybercommunities and cybercommerce : can we learn to cope? | |
Doing it right with computer communication : a case study of the United Services Automobile Association | |
Electronic-print competition : determinants of the potential for major change | |
The elephant and the blind men : the phenomenon of HDTV and its would-be stakeholders | |
Emerging corporate information networks : regulatory and industrial policy in Japan | |
The FCC access charge plan : the debates continue | |
Freelance writings in the high-tech age : a conflict of interests | |
Future United States strategy in the Third World : C³I challenges for USAF | |
Global political fallout : the first decade of the VCR, 1976-1985 | |
Global telecommunications : myth or reality? | |
Guest present. - Semin. Command Control Commun. Intell. | |
Guest presentations | |
Incidental paper | |
The information evolution : building blocks and bursting bundles | |
Information superiority : what is it? how to achieve it? | |
Information technology and economic performance : is measuring productivity still useful? | |
Information theory as a basis for rationalizing regulation of the communications industry | |
Information war power : lessons from air power | |
Infrastructure and the telephone network : defining the problem | |
Intelligence inside the White House : the influences of executive style and technology | |
The Internet : is it a bird? : is it a plane? : will it fly? | |
Issues concerning Telcos' entry into information services : experience in the United States, France, and Japan | |
Knowledge age standards : present scope and potential use in education | |
Knowledge as a strategic business resource | |
Louisiana v. FCC : its implications for the balance of power between state and federal authorities in telecommunications regulation | |
Managing the spectrum : win, lose, or share | |
Mikhail and the multiplying media | |
Non-fixed and fixed networks, complements, or alternatives? : background issues | |
The personal computer : growth patterns, limits, and new frontiers | |
Policy development for cellular telephone service in the United States and the United Kingdom | |
Post-Cold War secrecy policy | |
The present status and future tasks of telecommunications policy in Korea | |
Profits, politics, and capital formation : the economics of the traditional telephone industry | |
Review | |
Review (Harvard University. Program on Information Resources Policy) | |
Rogue computer programs-- viruses, worms, Trojan horses, and time bombs : prank, prowess, protection or prosecution? | |
The role of print on paper in the publishing house of the future | |
Size and growth trends of the information industry, 1975-1987 | |
Software user interface compatibility and copyright after Lotus Development v. Paperback Software International | |
Standards for personal communications in Europe and the United States | |
Standards: the rough road to the common byte | |
Student papers | |
Technical rips in the seams of intellectual property law : sowing the seeds of information assets law | |
The telecommunications industry in the U.S. and international competition : policy vs. practice | |
Telephone transaction-generated information : rights and restrictions | |
Telling ripe from hype in multimedia : the ecstasy and the agony | |
Transnational investments in mobile telephone systems : toward global telephone companies? | |
Understanding the use of electronic money, c1998: | |
Unholy matrimony : the marriage of operations and intelligence in C³I | |
Up in the air-- new wireless communications | |
Users and personal computers : languages and literacy, costs and benefits | |
Voice over the Internet : fad or future? | |
Whence and whither intelligence, command and control? : the certainty of uncertainty | |
Where to put the smarts : network or CPE? | |
Will geography end with computer communication? : the impact of computer communication on distance, time, and location |