17. SIGDOC 1999:
New Orleans,
Louisiana,
USA
Johndan Johnson-Eilola, Stuart A. Selber (Eds.):
Proceedings of the 17th annual international conference on Documentation, SIGDOC 1999, New Orleans, Louisiana, USA, September 12-14, 1999.
ACM 1999, ISBN 1-58113-072-4
- Barbara Mirel:
Complex queries in information visualizations: distributing instruction across documentation and interfaces.
1-8
- Lee Brasseur:
The role of experience and culture in computer graphing and graph interpretive processes.
9-15
- Clay Spinuzzi:
Grappling with distributed usability: a cultural-historical examination of documentation genres over four decades.
16-21
- Mark Zachry:
Constructing usable documentation: a study of communicative practices and the early uses of mainframe computing in industry.
22-25
- Patricia Carlson:
Information technology and organizational change.
26-35
- Patti Anklam:
Technical communications as knowledge management: evolution of a profession.
36-44
- Carl Stieren:
SST: using single-sourcing, SGML, and teamwork for documentation.
45-52
- Michael Priestley:
Dynamically assembled documentation.
53-57
- Isabel F. Cruz, Gerard T. McGuire:
Publication and customization of electronic documents using PANDA.
58-64
- Jochen Bern, Christoph Meinel:
One step further: extending electronic submission into the reviewing process.
65-69
- Jay Lesandrini:
Pulling yourself up by your own bootstraps: strategies for advancing your documentation team's position in your company.
70-71
- C. Shannon Brown:
Creating your own space: strategies for moving up in the development process.
72-73
- Meredith Blackwelder:
From the outside in: how to become part of the internal team.
74-77
- Glenn M. D'Amore:
The evolution of an information development process.
78-85
- Mary Hunter Utt, Robert Mathews:
Developing a user information architecture for Rational's ClearCase product family documentation set.
86-92
- B. Fraser, J. Roberts, G. M. Pianosi, Paulo S. C. Alencar, Donald D. Cowan, Daniel M. Germán, L. C. M. Nova:
Dynamic views of SGML tagged documents.
93-98
- Debbie Hysell:
ISO 9001: traditions before and after.
99-104
- John W. Stamey Jr., Thomas M. Roth III:
Technical documentation and related contractual liability.
105-109
- Margaret R. Heil:
Preparing technical communicators for future workplaces: a model that integrates teaming, professional communication skills, and a software development process.
110-119
- Kara Warburton:
A database of e-commerce terms: implementation and benefits in producing internationalized software.
120-126
- John W. Stanley Jr., W. Scott Speights:
Website localization.
127-130
- Beverly B. Zimmerman:
A rhetorical approach to understanding images in the new 'visual age'.
131-137
- Virginie Ahrens, Valérie Lecompte:
Paper to HTML - an automatic, seamless process for documentation production.
138-143
- Glenn McAllister:
The developer-documenter relationship in Java software development.
144-146
- Douglas Kramer:
API documentation from source code comments: a case study of Javadoc.
147-153
- Michael J. Albers:
Information design considerations for improving situation awareness in complex problem-solving.
154-158
- Robin Green:
Component-based software development: implications for documentation.
159-164
- Luc A. Chamberland:
Componentization of HTML-based online help.
165-168
- Kay Palkhivala, Cynthia Bowllan, Thomas Barnwell:
CBT on the fast track.
169-175
- Karl A. Hakkarainen:
Unifying documentation teams.
176-184
- James Miller, John D. Ferguson, Paul Murphy:
Groupware support for asynchronous document review.
185-192
- Zhongdong Zhang, Ernst Georg Haffner, Andreas Heuer, Thomas Engel, Christoph Meinel:
Role-based access control in online authoring and publishing systems vs. document hierarchy.
193-198
- Susan P. Hall, Lili Fox Velez:
There's more than one way to wire that: when assembly workers are technically writers.
199-205
- Jim Porter:
Software demonstration: Professional Writing Online.
206
- Kathy Haramundanis:
Software demo: a transaction processing information architecture.
207
- Jack Massa:
The CD browser - a new documentation vehicle.
208-210
- Margaret Martinez:
Intentional learning in an intentional world: new perspectives on audience analysis and instructional system design for successful learning and performance.
211-220
Copyright © Mon Nov 30 20:20:22 2009
by Michael Ley (ley@uni-trier.de)