Vol. 39 No. 5, September - September 2005
Index
- ARMA International Expo * Navy Pier Festival Hall * Chicago * September 18-20, 2005.
- 50th Annual Conference and Expo * Navy Pier * Chicago * September 18-21, 2005.
- ARMA '05: exhibitor profile.
- ARMA'05: conference schedule: all events located at the Navy Pier Festival Hall unless otherwise noted.
- Arma'05: exhibitor list.
- Arma'05:product category.
- Industry intelligence sessions on the show floor, aisle 200.
- Prizes & giveaways.
- Program sponsors.
- Technology application briefings on the show floor, aisle 200.
- Correction.
- Staying on top of trends, techniques leads to business success.
- U.S. Senate, House pass bills to extend patriot act.
- New website offers government reports.
- ALA: government asks about patrons.
- Audit: homeland security unprepared.
- War on terror targets ISPs in Europe.
- FTC: subject-line labeling ineffective against spam.
- New HIPAA security guidance papers released.
- NARA releases military records.
- Breaches spur data encryption.
- Government secrecy reaches historic levels.
- Despite complaints, U.K. complies with FOI levels.
- Study reveals consumers' data worries.
- Politicians promote FOIA compliance.
- Britain warns of Trojan horse computer attacks.
- Most U.S. libraries offer free web access.
- NARA enters new "ERA" of electronic records management: National Archives' initiatives focus on preserving and providing access to electronic records.
- Improved web services marks new editor.
- IRISPdf aids conversion of scanned documents to electronic data.
- New storage solution features compact packaging, speed.
- New system simplifies e-doc management.
- New utility groups files by probing names and attributes.
- Program allows web interface for databases.
- Software helps enforce retention policies.
- Software provides disk encryption.
- The why and how of international records retention.
- Blogs: the new information revolution? RIM professionals have an opportunity to provide leadership and guidance in the development of policies to ensure that blogs are managed as records.
- Mining for information gold: data mining offers the RIM professional an opportunity to contribute to knowledge discovery in databases in a substantial way.
- RIM professionals: a distinct personality? A study reveals that records and information management (RIM) professionals exhibit particular personality traits, which should aid those making hiring and career decisions.
- Risk analysis and control: vital to records protection: identifying and preventing risk is smart business practice. This excerpt from Records and Information Management: Fundamentals of Professional Practice gives the fundamentals of assessing risk in your records operations, putting a prevention plan in place, and auditing that plan for compliance.
- Seeking information warriors.