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IEEE Technology and Society Magazine, Volume 23
Volume 23, Number 1, Spring 2004
- Brian M. O'Connell:
President's Message - A growing and dynamic society. 3-8 - Joseph R. Herkert:
Something old and something new. 4-8 - Karl D. Stephan:
Can engineering ethics be taught? 5-8 - Kevin W. Bowyer:
Face recognition technology: security versus privacy. 9-19 - Sylvia Beyer, Kristina Rynes, Susan M. Haller:
Deterrents to women taking computer science courses. 21-28 - Martin Peckerar:
Addressing myths of science and public policy: Part II. 29-35 - Josep M. Basart Muñoz:
Which ethics will survive in our technological society? 36-39 - Linda L. Brennan, Victoria E. Johnson:
Technology management for corporate social responsibility. 40-48
Volume 23, Number 2, Summer 2004
- Bradley Kjell:
The rise of embedded processing and the opportunity for open standards. 4-5 - Avishag Gordon:
9/11 was not Guerilla Warfare: Comments on "Efficiency of Guerilla/Terrorist Warfare" by Chester L. Smith. 5 - Andrés Martínez, Valentín Villarroel, Joaquín Seoane, Francisco del Pozo:
Rural telemedicine for primary healthcare in developing countries. 13-22 - Pamela S. Douglas, Courtney Morgan, Heather Lee, Kenneth R. Foster:
LVAD as destination therapy-the economic dilemma. 23-27 - Chester L. Smith:
Reply by Chester Smith [9/11 was not Guerilla Warfare: Comments on "Efficiency of Guerilla/Terrorist Warfare" by Chester L. Smith]. 27 - Catherine J. Weinberger:
Just ask! Why surveyed women did not pursue IT courses or careers. 28-35 - Stephen H. Unger:
Making computer professionals and other engineers: low-priced commodities. 36-40
Volume 23, Number 3, Fall 2004
- Brian M. O'Connell:
President's Message - Expanding the Conversation. 4-5 - Terri Bookman:
ISTAS'04 Examines Impacts of Globalization [News]. 5-12 - Clinton J. Andrews:
Guest editorial - Social implications of security and crime prevention. 6 - Clinton J. Andrews:
Security and the built environment: an interview with John Habraken. 7-12 - Darius Sollohub:
Territory and mobility in the American suburb. 13-15 - Luis D. Balula:
Formal and ethical aspects of security in public spaces. 15-16 - Stephan Schmidt:
World Wide Plaza: the corporatization of urban public space. 17-18 - Jeremy Nemeth:
Redefining security in public space: the case of LOVE park. 19-20 - Ronald V. Clarke:
Crime proofing of products: the idea and the substance. 21-27 - Mary L. Cummings:
Creating moral buffers in weapon control interface design. 28-33 - L. Jean Camp:
Digital identity. 34-41
Volume 23, Number 4, Winter 2004
- Edward J. Woodhouse:
Nanotechnology controversies - Guest Editorial. 6-8 - Christine L. Peterson:
Nanotechnology: from Feynman to the grand challenge of molecular manufacturing. 9-15 - James Wilsdon:
The politics of small things: nanotechnology, risk, and uncertainty. 16-21 - David Berube, John D. Shipman:
Denialism: Drexler vs. Roco. 22-26 - Michael G. Bennett:
Does existing law fail to address nanotechnoscience? 27-32 - Jürgen Altmann, Mark Gubrud:
Anticipating military nanotechnology. 33-40 - Chris Phoenix:
Studying molecular manufacturing. 41-47 - Alfred Nordmann:
Nanotechnology's worldview: new space for old cosmologies. 48-54 - Michael E. Gorman, James F. Groves, Robin K. Catalano:
Societal dimensions of nanotechnology. 55-62
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