For those of you who read my editor’s note last month, you’ll recall I’m throwing this space open for comment: What should the editor’s note page be used for? Orienting you to the issue you’re about to read, highlighting some of the sights to see? Should I give some context as to how our Editorial Advisory Board grappled with the topic of the month’s special report? Or should we do away with the editor’s note altogether?
To cite this article: Edward Grossman (1988) Content analysis and elections: The 1987 federal election, Politics, 23:2, 95-106To link to this article: http://dx.
I am the Editor of Queue (http://www.acmqueue.org), ACM's recently launched magazine geared towards practicing software developers and architects. We have a great editorial advisory board, including industry giants such as Steve Bourne, Eric Allman, and Jim Gray.We have a special report on "Gaming Technology and Issues" coming up. We are looking for people who might be interested in writing for this issue.We would be entirely open on article ideas for this or upcoming issues. Queue is not a "here's the latest product from company X" magazine -- we are more in-depth, focusing on core technologies themselves, how they affect software developers. Obviously gaming is an area that has a huge impact far beyond just the gaming industry. We want to share what is happening at the cutting edge with our audience.
! XML Spy. This is a great combination of text editor and GUI. In situations where I want the raw XML abstracted away from me, the GUI is great. But I can always switch back to text-editing mode for tasks such as text replacement. Tool I hate! Oracle SQL*Plus. I only dabble in database development and I fi nd that my simple tasks are more quickly accomplished with SQL Server's GUI. I hate the rigmarole of opening up the text buffer for editing long SQL statements. It's a task I have to relearn every time I touch an Oracle system.
It clearly outlined the technical and social problems associated with RFID systems. I definitely do not want my personal info stored in someone’s database with my purchase data from RFID tags, so the kill switch is a good idea. Unfortunately, it does not solve the problem of retailers collecting detailed information on the buying habits of their customers and then selling or losing this data. It was a really great article. Please have more of the same.
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