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ACM StandardView, Volume 4
Volume 4, Number 1, March 1996
- Ken Krechmer:

Technical standards: foundations of the future. 4-8 - Steven Oksala, Anthony M. Rutkowski, Michael B. Spring, Jon O'Donnell:

The structure of IT standardization. 9-22 - Ken Krechmer:

Recommendations for the global information highway: a matter of standards. 24-28 - Joseph Farrell:

Harnesses and muzzles: greed as engine and threat in the standards process. 29-31 - Martin Libicki:

Second-best practices for interoperability. 32-35 - Fran Nielsen:

Human behavior: another dimension of standards setting. 36-41 - Jonathan A. Morell, Selden L. Stewart:

Standards development for information technology: best practices for the United States. 42-51 - Xavier Pucel:

SEMI: the standards-setting organization behind the trade show association. 52-55 - Ronald W. Walker:

The National Standards Systems Network. 56-57 - Jay Iorio:

The IEEE Standards Process Automation System. 58-60 - James Kindrick, John A. Sauter, Robert S. Matthews:

Improving conformance and interoperability testing. 61-68
Volume 4, Number 2, June 1996
- David Rowley:

The business of application portability. 80-87 - Paul Tanner:

Software portability: still an open issue? 88-93 - Stephen R. Walli:

The myth of application source-code conformance. 94-99 - Rob Farnum:

Applications programming interface for Windows: a timely standard. 100-103 - Curtis Royster Jr.:

DoD strategy on open systems and interoperability. 104-106 - Gary E. Fisher:

A CSL view of applications, portability, scalability, and interoperability. 107 - Alan Doniger, Nigel Goodwin:

Standards: what's in it for me? 108-113 - Brian L. Meek:

Too soon, too late, too narrow, too wide, too shallow, too deep. 114-118
Volume 4, Number 3, September 1996
- Hugo Rehesaar:

International standards: practical or just theoretical? 123-127 - Charles R. Symons:

Standardizing at the leading edge. 128-132 - John Harauz:

A software engineering standards framework for nuclear power. 133-138 - Alain Abran:

Teaching software engineering using ISO standards. 139-145 - Leonard L. Tripp:

International standards on system and software integrity. 146-150 - Thomas Vollman:

Developing a configuration management tool compliance standard. 151-154 - Roger Hicks:

The Internet Society of New Zealand: roles, goals, and ambitions. 155-160 - Katy Dickinson:

Software process framework at Sun. 161-165
Volume 4, Number 4, December 1996
- Bob Toth:

Putting the U.S. standardization system into perspective: new insights. 169-178 - Florence Nicolas:

The United States: a standardized vision of international relations? 179-182 - Kai Jakobs, Rob Procter, Robin Williams

:
Users and standardization - worlds apart? The example of electronic mail. 183-191 - Lance McKee:

OGC: user-mediated technology drives vendor opportunity. 192-197 - Henry Lowe, Eric Newcomer, Jun Sekine:

STDL: a route to productivity for distributed processing. 198-204 - Martin B. H. Weiss, Ronald T. Toyokuku:

Free-ridership in the standards-setting process: the case of 10BaseT. 205-212

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