Vol. 36 No. 5, September 2002
Index
- ARMA surveys members.
- ARMA wins insurance settlement.
- Celebrate the profession.
- New privacy resources available.
- Putting the international in ARMA International.
- Rick Stirling appointed Canadian Director.
- SII: an open letter to ARMA members.
- Special election results are in.
- The year in perspective.
- Wellington New Zealand chapter votes to dissolve.
- The value of information management.
- Corporate-reform act impacts RIM professionals.
- Second-hand IT.
- Portal progress.
- The high cost of Web content management.
- U.S. government unveils computer security standards.
- Critical infrastructures at risk.
- Killing privacy with a modem.
- Say `cheese'.
- House votes to increase penalties for cybercrime.
- IBM to purchase PricewaterhouseCoopers consulting.
- Internet privacy legislation emerges: new legislation could bring U.S. privacy protection laws into step with those of the European Union.
- Accutrac simplifies workflow process.
- ArticSoft offers file protection.
- CC Data Software offers e-mail solution.
- Fingerprint Cards licenses technology.
- LaserFiche rolls out workflow solution.
- Oce and Autodesk partner.
- SEM offers CD-ROM declassifier.
- Siemens, Open Text extend market reach.
- Lies, corruption, and document destruction: never before in the history of American business has a global corporation been destroyed by acts directly related to document retention and destruction.
- Information architecture: five things information managers need to know; as the information boom in business, public, and consumer cultures continues, information architecture and information management will become indispensable.
- Designing better documents: information design professionals attempt to understand what makes documents usable and to apply that knowledge in preparing functional documents and records.
- Preservation risk management for Web resources: preserving Web content requires substantial resource commitments and flexible and innovative approaches to new technologies, organizational missions, and user expectations.
- Wireless information management: wise information managers will begin now to prepare for the day when all records are sent, stored, and retrieved wirelessly.
- Tying it all together: a CIO perspective; technology is making it imperative that information technology and records and information management come together for the full benefit of the organization.
- Using information and e-mail for political gain; e-mail and workplace politics have merged for a common, if unintended, purpose: e-politics, the use of information and electronic communication to further political purposes.
- Ethics: good, evil, and moral duty: business ethics are absolutely critical today, but first organizations must define what is ethical and understand that what is ethical today may not be ethical tomorrow.
- Making Sense of Documents in the Digital Age.
- Managing web content.
- Re-thinking your business paradigms.