Vol. 37 No. 3, May 2003
Index
- ARMA 2003: boston: converging technology, knowledge, business, and information management.
- Planning for the worst.
- Should libraries censor patrons' surfing?
- Few organizations have effective continuity plans.
- Risk management: a core competency for CIOs.
- U.S. patent office moves data online.
- One number for phone, fax, and 'net?
- Cyber crime code could punish online protesters.
- Pentagon designed for records storage.
- The need for speed.
- Hard drives tell all.
- Will floppy drives become extinct?
- Will PDF prevent a digital dark age?
- Information at a price: liberty vs. security: follow-up legislation proposes to increase the sweeping domestic intelligence and surveillance powers granted to the U.S. federal government by the USA PATRIOT Act--but will it be at the cost of civil liberties?
- Accent Graphics announces ASP Solution.
- DocuLex offers OCR V6.
- Global graphics acquires Ansyr Technology.
- IMR launches Alchemy Web.
- Kodak enhances scanners.
- Minolta offers total print solution.
- NCRA, T3 partner.
- Open Text offers Livelink tools.
- Software features built-in anti-piracy.
- Spacesaver announces TouchPad Release.
- Prepared or not ... that is the vital question: when unplanned events or full-blown disasters strike, RIM professionals must have a strategy to ensure survival and at a cost that organizations can afford.
- A disaster plan in action: how a law firm in the World Trade Center survived 9/11 with vital records and employees intact.
- The unlikely heroes of cyber security: viruses, privacy breaches, and other malicious cyber activity regularly threaten organizations' vital information. Cyber insurance providers hope to control the damage risk.
- Recording integrity: assessing records' content after enron: in the post-Enron, Sarbanes-Oxley environment, RIM professionals must expand their thinking and responsibilities to improve and more proactively manage the information content in organizations' corporate records.
- The 'wonder years' of knowledge management: just because the words are not being used as often does not mean that knowledge management has faded away--it has simply matured a bit.
- The corporate records conundrum: capturing e-mail in corporate records requires the right approach to technology, but solving the problem sets the stage for future challenges.
- Resource review: an online database for every corporate toolbox.
- Effectively managing electronic records and archives.