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Conference heron::euro_swas_ai

Title:Europe-Swas-Artificial-Intelligence
Moderator:HERON::BUCHANAN
Created:Fri Jun 03 1988
Last Modified:Thu Aug 04 1994
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:442
Total number of notes:1429

18.0. "STANFORD DIGEST" by HERON::ROACH (TANSTAAFL !) Mon Jul 25 1988 15:19

    STANFORD DIGEST entries, as collected from the INFOnet, will be
    posted in this note.
    
    Please consider this a READ ONLY note which will contain only STANFORD
    DIGEST entries. If you would like to comment on, or start a discussion
    about any of the entries, please do so via a separate note.
    
    The STANFORD DIGEST comments on AI, as well as general Computer
    Science topics at Stanford University. It also highlights DIGITAL's
    participation in research projects at the university.
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18.1Stanford Digest V1.9HERON::ROACHTANSTAAFL !Mon Jul 25 1988 21:04578
                   I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Date:      05-Apr-1988 10:02 CET
                                        From:       
                                                   BEANE@AITG@MRGATE 
                                        Dept:       
                                        Tel No:     

TO:  ROACH@A1NSTC


Subject: Stanford Digest V1.9

*******************************************************************************
*****                 STANFORD TECHNOLOGY DIGEST                          *****
****                  VOLUME 1          NUMBER 9                           ****
***                        MARCH     1988                                   ***
**                Reesa Abrams, Ira Machefsky Editors                        **
*******************************************************************************
 
STANFORD TECHNOLOGY DIGEST is a monthly technology transfer forum for 
communicating research, technical, and competitive information between 
the Digital and Stanford University communities.
 
*******************************************************************************
 
 
The purpose of STD is to inform Digital readers of events and activities of
interest in the Stanford research community.  The style of this digest will
be to provide abstracts or short articles of interest with references to
more detailed information for you to pursue should you wish to follow-up.
This magazine is restricted for use only by employees of Digital Equipment
Corporation.
 
We welcome contributions from anyone who is sponsoring research, doing
work or just visiting Stanford at any time. 
 
We also encourage comments from readers and Letters to the Editor, which
will be published with the author's permission.
 
If you wish to subscribe to STD or change your subscription address
please send mail to CALDEC::ABRAMS.
 
*************************************************************************
*************************************************************************
 
			TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
			THIS ISSUE 10 PAGES
 
I.	MANUFACTURING IN THE 90'S - STANFORD BUSINESS SCHOOL

II.     BAY AREA SYSTEMS SEMINAR

III.    ME210 DESIGN REVIEW OPPORTUNITY

IV.     SEMINARS AT BERKELEY

V.      THE MANAGERIAL CHALLENGES OF INTEGRATING CAD/CAD

VI.	INFORMATION NEEDED FOR JOINT DEC/APPLE UNIVERSITY PROGRAM

VII.	DEC PERSONNEL ON CAMPUS
 
*******************************************************************************
*******************************************************************************

I.	MANUFACTURING IN THE 90'S - STANFORD BUSINESS SCHOOL


On Saturday, April 16, 1988 the Stanford Graduate School of Business will
run a one day conference to address the major issues facing the manufacturing
sector.

"Increasing competition, accelerating change, globalizing industries, uncertain
government policy ... today's business environment grows ever more complex.
As companies strive to win, manufacturing is emerging as a critical strategic
resource.  Excellence demands that manufacturing integrate with all other
parts of the organization to produce a coherent winning strategy.  JIT,
zero defects, flexible manufacturing are typical of manufacturing issues
profoundly affecting all aspects of a company's operations.  For the 
manufacturing industry of the 90's success is truly on the line."

Keynote speakers:	Our Time Has Come - A Manufacturing Renaissance
			George Fisher, President and CEO, Motorola

			Competing in the Global Marketplace
			Shoichiro Irimajiri, President, Honda of America
			Manufacturing

Workshop Leaders:

A1.			A Case for CIM
			J. Tracey O'Rourke, President and CEO, Allen-Bradley 
			

A2.			Distributed Technologies in High Tech Manufacturing
			Dr. Mihir PArikh, President and CEO, Asyst Tech. Inc.

A3.			Innovative Strategies in Small Scale Manufacturing
			Maurice E.P. Gunderson, President, Edison Systems Corp.

A4.			Managing Major Transitions in Manufacturing
			Homer Moeller, Senior V.P. Operations, Hanes Knit Prod.

A5.			Quality, Culture and Renewal in American Manufacturing
			Robert Waterman, President, Waterman and Co.

A6.			Technology and Global Sourcing
			Ralph Russo, V.P. Worldwide Operations, Apple Computer

A7.			Tomorrow's Accounting Today
			Professor Geo. Foster, Stanford Graduate School 
			of Business and John Lamley, Group Controller, H.P.
A8.
			The Opportunities and Problems of Multi-National 
			Manufacturing
			Robert C. Graham, President, RCG Associates, Inc.
			Tom Metz, Program Manager 9370 System Development, IBM


B1.
			Benefitting from Japanese Style Management in the U.S.
			Eystein Thordadson, Senior V.P. General Manager,
			Hillsboro Facility, Fujitsu America

B2.			Careers in Manufacturing: Pros, Cons, Paths, and 
			Salaries
			Bill Bridenbaugh, Senior V.P. Boise Cascade
			Scott McNealy, President, Sin Micro

B3.			Changing the Role of Manufacturing in a Large Corp.
			Earl Hewitt, General Manager, Operations, Northern
			Telecom

B4.			International Sourcing as a Long-Term Strategy
			David E. Patterson, V.P. Supply, Cummins Engine
			Andrew Chu, Southeast Asia Business Director, Cummins
			Engine

B5.			Manufacturing as a Competitive Advantage
			Elizabeth Haas, Principal, McKinsey & Co.
		
B6.			Manufacturing Strategy - An Example That Worked
			Jean-Pierre PAtkay, General Manager
			Manufacturing Productivity Division, H. P.

			Measuring Quality in the Plant and in the Eyes of the
B7.			Customer
			Doug Campbell, CEO, Kilovac
			Martin Dorio, Dir of Quality and Productivity, FMC

B8.			New Product Development/Manufcturing Start-Up
			Walt Rosenbrough, Senior V.P. Marketing, 
			SSI/Hillenbrand Ind. and Prof. Steven Wheelwright
			Stanford Graduate School of Business

B9.			Plant Development:Innovation in Operations
			Mark Chestnut, V.P. Operational Effectiveness,
			Cummins Engine



			Biotechnology Startups: Shooting For Wild Success
C1.			Gary T. Steele, President and CEO, Molecular Devices

			Encouraging Innovation at 3M: Organizational
C2.			and Cultural Mechanisms
			Bill DeGenaro, Director of Innovation Resources, 3M

C3.			Optimizing the Location of Business Operations
			Tsuyoshi Kawanishi, Senior V.P. Semi-Conductor
			Group, Toshiba Corporation

C4.			Overview of Quality Engineering For Product Design:
			Case Studies of the Taguchi Method
			Dr. Genichi Taguchi, Executive Director, American
			Supplier Institute and Yuin Wu, V.P. American
			Supplier Institute

C5.			The Impact of Changing Technology on the workforce
			Austin E. Vanchieri, President, Information
			Systems Division, Xerox Corp.

			The Role of Manufacturing in U.S. International 
C6			Competitiveness
			Allen J. Lenz, Director, Office of Trade and Investment
			Analysis, U. S. Dept. of Commerce

C7.			Time-Based Competition
			George Stalk, V.P. Boston Consulting Group

			Transferring New Products to Manufacturing:
C8.			Too Soon or Too Late
			Thomas Huseby, V.P. Industrial, Raychem

To Register contact:
		
			The Manufacturing Conference
			Graduate School of Business
			Stanford, University
			
Registration Fee: 
			Students $12
			Corporate Prepaid $125
			Day of the Conference $150

			Lunch and Reception Included

INDICATE CHOICE PREFERENCE FOR EACH OF A, B, AND C CONFERENCES.



Capacity is limited and priority will be given to registrations prior
to April 1.  For more information please call 415 - 493 - 9097.

If you are going to attend please inform Reesa (CALDEC::) Abrams so we
can assure the maximum Digital coverage for this seminar.


*******************************************************************************

II.
			BAY AREA SYSTEMS SEMINAR

The Bay Area Systems Seminar was held at Stanford University
on Friday, March 25th. The abstracts of the program follow.
 
 
	++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 
Concurrent, Real-time Collection on Stock Multiprocessors
John R. Ellis, Kai Li, Andrew Appel
DEC-SRC
E-mail: DECSRC::Ellis
 
We've designed and implemented the first copying garbage-collection
algorithm that is efficient, real-time, concurrent, runs on commercial
uniprocessors and shared-memory multiprocessors, and requires no change
to compilers.  The algorithm uses standard virtual-memory hardware to
detect references to "from space" objects and to synchronize the
collector and mutator threads.  We've implemented and measured a
prototype for the ML language running on SRC's 5-processor Firefly.
It will be straightforward to merge our techniques with generational
collection (Ungar, Shaw).  An incremental, non-concurrent version could
be implemented easily on many versions of Unix.
 
	++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 
The Sun Network Software Environment
Masahiro Honda
Sun Microsystems
 
The Sun Network Software Environment (NSE) is a network-based object
manager for software development.  The goals of the NSE are to 1)
facilitate parallel development of large software systems, 2) help
maintain consistency and completeness of objects being developed, and
3) be extensible to different types of objects.  Parallel development
is supported through an optimistic concurrency control mechanism, where
developers do not acquire locks before modifying objects.  Instead,
developers copy objects, modify the copies, and merge the modified
objects with the originals.  The NSE provides copy operations on units
that are complete and consistent sets of objects.  These copy
operations produce logical copies; a physical copy of and object is not
made until the object has been modified.  To help developers merge
objects, the NSE detects conflicting modifications and provides tools
to resolve the conflicts.  Finally, the objects managed by the NSE are
typed, and the set of types is extensible by tool builders.  Objects
manipulated by different software tools can be managed by the NSE by
tool builders defining NSE types for these objects.
 
	++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 
Spider: High-Performance Processor Interconnect Software
Kent Treiber
IBM Almaden Research Center
 
Spider is a completed research project on high performance
processor interconnect software.  The original goal was to
support message transfer between closely coupled
mainframes with  roughly an order of magnitude
fewer instructions than currently available software
without inventing new architectures.
It's interesting to note that Spider was implemented
on top of what some view as an archaic, monsterous
and slow operating system: MVS. The talk will include an
overview of Spider, discuss some of the interesting design
issues and review performance data.
 
	++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 
The Analysis of Diskless Workstation Traffic on an Ethernet
Riccardo Gusella
University of California, Berkeley
E-mail: [email protected]
 
We analyze the traffic on a 10 Mb/s Ethernet local area network
that connects diskless workstations to file servers in a university
environment.  The traffic is substantially heavier than has been recorded
in previous studies; over 1-second intervals it frequently exceeds
30% of the network bandwidth.
 
We display and interpret the distribution of packet lengths and packet 
interarrival times for the three protocols that carry significant traffic:
TCP (character traffic), ND (paging traffic), and NFS (remote file
access traffic).  The two latter protocols account for 68% of 
the packets and 94% of the data bytes on the network.
File access to a remote file server generates bursts of traffic
that can last several seconds and demand bandwidths in the order 
of 120K bytes per second, or about 10% of the Ethernet bandwidth.

*******************************************************************************

III. 
	 	   YOU ARE INVITED 

		  	 to a


	      D E S I G N     R E V I E W

	  	        of the

	  Stanford University ME210 Design Project
 

	"AUTOMATIC TILT ADJUSTING ROBOT END EFFECTOR"



Your comments on the design would be greatly appreciated!
If you know anyone else who might be interested, please
forward this invitation. 


When:   	  Thursday April 7   at  9am
	
Where:	          Chelmsford (CTS) Harvard Conference Room

Any Questions:    Call Cindy Pribble at dtn 287-3526


	++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++


 	  STATUS - Stanford University ME210 Design Project -
		  	"Tilt Adjusting Robot End Effector"

A design team at Stanford University is developing a robot end
effector for placement of components with parallelism problems.  A
design review of the project was held at Stanford in early March.

A prototype has been built of the passive tilt design, which features
a ball-and-socket joint to adjust for components in which the grip
surface (usually top of the heat sink) is not parallel to the lead
plane.  The joint pivots freely on an air bearing and is supported by
the Bernoulli effect.

Primary objectives of the design are to adjust for tilt, maintain X-Y
placement accuracy, control placement force, and prevent lead damage.

The basic concepts used in their design work seem to work; however,
initial trials with the prototype reveal some problems which must be
corrected.  The pneumatic line for vacuum pick-up of the part was
routed through the center of the joint, but this interferes with the
air flow required for Bernoulli effect and the line will have to be
routed around the outside.  Other areas of concern include bearing
alignment in the z-compliant device, and the transition from a
frictionless air bearing to a rigid joint.

Using this gripper results in a placement sequence as follows:

	- Pick up chip from carrier
	- Place chip on level surface
	- Adjust for tilt with air bearing
	- Lock joint and pick up chip
	- Look at chip and make X-Y offset calculation
	- Place chip on board, with lead plane parallel to board surface.

Future plans for the design team include completion of the acceptance
test procedure, further debugging of the prototype hardware, and
set-up of a work station utilizing the AdeptOne robot for thorough
demonstration and testing of the prototype.  The design project is
scheduled for completion in June, 1988.
*******************************************************************************

IV.			SEMINARS AT BERKELEY

We are sometimes asked for a list of the research interests of faculty
members at different universities.  The following list of the CS
seminars given at Berkeley shows the faculty sponsors and their research
areas.

I.  MAJOR SEMINARS
 
    These seminars will be held every semester.
 
CS 298-1  Computer Systems [Hardware]
 
   Anderson, Despain, Ferrari, Katz, Ousterhout, Patterson
 
CS 298-2  Theoretical Computer Science
 
   Blum, Canny, Karp, Lawler, Seidel, Vazirani
 
CS 298-3  Software Systems
 
   Fateman, Ferrari, Graham, Harrison, Hilfinger, Kahan, Rowe,
   Stonebraker, Wilensky
 
CS 298-4  GRA-VIS-MOD [Graphics, Vision, Geometric Modeling]
 
   Barsky, Malik, Sastry, Sequin
 
II. OTHER SEMINARS OFFERED EACH TERM
 
   These are seminars with more than one sponsor.  They
are likely to keep going, without regard to faculty sabbaticals
and leaves.
 
CS 298-6  Symbolic Mathematics and Scientific Software
 
   Fateman, Kahan, Parlett
 
CS 298-8  Distributed System Performance
 
   Anderson, Ferrari, Smith
       
CS 298-10  Expert and Knowledge-Based Systems
 
   Russell, Zadeh
 
CS 298-12  Data Base Design
 
   Rowe, Stonebraker
 
CS 298-14  Computational Complexity
 
   This seminar is run by and for the grad students in theoretical
   CS; faculty are explicitly /not/ invited to attend.  
 
III. SEMINARS SPONSORED BY INDIVIDUALS
 
   These seminars are sponsored by individual faculty members,
primarily as a device for meeting with students they supervise.
These seminars will most likely be scheduled each term, so long
as the faculty sponsor does not go on leave.
  
CS 298-5  Object Oriented Programming Systems
 
   Rowe 
 
CS 298-9  Postgres Development Issues
 
   Stonebraker
 
Cs 298-13  Natural Languages
 
   Wilensky
 
CS 298-18  Language Implementation and Environments Research Group
 
   Graham
 
CS 298-28  Software Engineering
 
   Ramamoorthy
 
IV.  PROJECT-ORIENTED SEMINARS
 
   These seminars are tied to specific research projects and presumably
will continue as long as the project does--should check with the
faculty concerned each term or year.
 
CS 298-19 SPUR
 
   Katz, Ousterhout, Patterson
 
 
CS 298-20  Transaction Processing Architectures
 
   Katz, Patterson, Stonebraker

*******************************************************************************
V.			THE MANAGERIAL CHALLENGES OF
			     INTEGRATING CAD/CAM

A new report has been released by Paul Adler of IE Dept. at Stanford (also
a part of SIMA) in February 1988. It summarizes the results of an investigation
into the managerial challenges of integrating CAD and CAM. It was guided by
two research questions:

	a.  What are the organizational conditions and managerial approaches
	that can maximize the effectiveness of CAD/CAM?

	b.  What effect is CAD/CAM integration having on the 
	Design/Manufacturing interface?  How should this interface be 
	managed?  Is CAD/CAM the long-awaited solution to persistent 
	management frustrations and organizational frictions at the 
	Design/Manufacturing interface?

Nine U.S. electronics businesses and 4 U.S. aircraft companies believed
to be the leaders in CAD/CAM integration were visited. The output is what
is believed to be the 'best practice' in each. Digital was visited.

Three conclusions were reached:
	1.  There is still struggle to capitalize on CAD/CAM potential.
	The integration potential is underexploited.

	2.  CAD/CAM integration  does not solve Design/Manufacturing 
	problems it highlights them showing organizational and management 
	issues to be resolved.

	3.  5 Key Strategic Challenges to CAD/CAM were identified as
	managerial challenges representing skills, procedures, structure,
	strategy, and culture.

There is a very comprehensive writeup of about 100 pages with an
executive summary.  If you are interested in a copy please contact
Reesa (CALDEC::) Abrams

*******************************************************************************
VI.	Information Needed for Joint DEC/Apple University Program

Digital's External Research Program is in the early stages of putting
together a program of joint DEC/Apple projects on university campuses.
These projects are intended to complement/supplement work under way as
internal DEC engineering projects in support of the recent DEC/Apple
announcements.  In order to identify areas of interest for this
program we would appreciate hearing from anyone connected with or who
knows about any internal DEC/Apple joint projects. Please send a note
to Ira (RDVAX::) Machefsky. Thanks in advance.

*******************************************************************************



VII.			DEC PERSONNEL ON CAMPUS
 
 
 
DEC personnel resident on campus:
 
 
	Ira Machefsky -  CRA Quantum Project Manager
 
	Hewon Hwang -    GEEP in Manufacturing Systems Masters Program of SIMA
			 in ME -  Digital return date - 3-21-89
	 
	Alex Bronstein - GEEP - finishing a dissertation in Formal
			 Verification of Concurrent Systems in CS.
			 Digital return date - 6-30-89
 
	Bruce DeLagi -   Co-Director Architecture Project, Heuristic
			 Programming Project
 
	Reesa Abrams -   Technology Transfer Liason

	Brian Michon -   GEEP MSCS, System Design/Interface - Digital return
			 date - 4-1-88

	Carrie Wilpolt - GEEP MSCS, Software Engineering/Programming Systems -
			 Digital return date - 4-1-88
	
	Nancy Wogrin -   GEEP in AI Masters Program - Digital return date -
  			 7-15-88
 
 
********************************************************************************
********************************************************************************
 
			END OF THIS ISSUE
 
********************************************************************************
********************************************************************************

 

18.2FWD: MARCH/APRIL. WTDULYSSE::ROACHTANSTAAFL !Tue Apr 09 1991 15:24700
 

                  I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Date:     08-Apr-1991 06:00pm CET
                                        From:     BEANE
                                                  BEANE@BIGRED@MRGATE@DPD03@DPD
                                        Dept:      
                                        Tel No:    

TO: See Below

Subject: FWD: MARCH/APRIL. WTD

<<forwarding/distribution deleted>>
********************************************************************************
*****                  WESTERN TECHNOLOGY DIGEST                           *****
****                  VOLUME 4		 NUMBER 5			    ****
***                  MARCH/APRIL           1991                              ***
**              Mary Elizabeth Hayes 	 Editor                               **
********************************************************************************
 
WESTERN TECHNOLOGY DIGEST is a monthly technology transfer forum for 
communicating research, technical, and competitive information between 
Digital and research communities.
		
		********************************
 
THIS MAGAZINE IS RESTRICTED FOR INTERNAL USE ONLY BY EMPLOYEES OF DIGITAL 
EQUIPMENT CORPORATION.  @ Copyright Digital Equipment Corporation 1987, 1988,
1989, 1990, 1991.
*******************************************************************************
  
The purpose of WTD is to inform Digital readers of events and activities of
interest in the research community.  The style of this digest will be to 
provide abstracts or short articles of interest with references to more 
detailed information for you to pursue should you wish to follow-up.
 
We welcome contributions from anyone who is sponsoring research, doing
work. 
 
We also encourage comments from readers and Letters to the Editor, which
will be published with the author's permission.
 
If you wish to subscribe to WTD or change your subscription address
or to submit papers or articles please send mail to REESA::HAYES

If you wish to receive copies of the articles mentioned in WTD, please send
all requests to REESA::HAYES. Please include your mail stop as the articles
are sent in hard copy format. Also please note, if you are ordering copies
of articles from past issues, you must but the issue, title and authors name.
********************************************************************************
			TABLE OF CONTENTS
                        THIS ISSUE =

I.	Why Are There So Few Female Computer Scientists?
        - Ellen Spertus

II. 	Autonomous Robots For Semiconductor Manufacturing Enviornment
        - Jean-Claude Latombe

III. 	Economic Issues In Computer Interface Standardization
        - Garth Saloner

IV.	Ways Women Lead - Judy B. Rosener

V.	The Concept Database: Multimedia Tool To Support Concurrent
        Design History Archival - Alice M. Agogino & Stephen Bradley

VI.	Learning Lost: The Problem Of Not Accounting For R&D
        - Margaret B.W. Graham

VII.	Berkeley Image Database Project - U.C. Berkeley

VIII.	Safety Of The Thermal Protection System Of The Space Shuttle
        Orbiter: Quantitative Analysis And Organizational Factors
        - M. Elizabeth Pate-Cornell & Paul D. Fischbeck

IX.	Texas A&M's Program for Automation In Manufacturing
        - Becky Taylor

X.	High-Speed Communication Networks Seminar April 18-19
        - U.C. Berkeley

XI.	Note: Two Past Seminars - Innovations In Trading Systems
        - U.C. Berkeley & The CASIS Workshop Seminar

XII.	Automated Paper Request Form
*****************************************************************************
               Why are There so Few Female Computer Scientists?

     			Ellen Spertus

     Women pursue education and careers in computer science far less 
frequently than men do. In 1989, only 17.5% of PhDs in computer 
science went to women, and only 6.5% of computer science professors 
were female. Additionally, the number of female computer science 
students appear to be increasing at only a slow rate or even 
decreasing. Even apart from ethical concerns at women's lack of 
participation in computer science, the demographics of the country are 
such that the United States will not have enough engineers and 
scientists unless under represented groups increase their 
participation. This report examines the influences against a women's 
pursuing a technical field, particulars computer science. Such factors 
include the different ways boys and girls are raised, the stereotypes 
of female engineers, subtle biases that females face, problems 
resulting from working in mostly environments, and sexual biases in 
language. Recommendations appear describing effective and ineffective 
ways that people try to encourage women. A theme of the report is that 
women's under representation is not primarily due to direct 
discrimination but to unconscious behavior that tends to perpetuate 
the status quo.
*******************************************************************************
     Autonomous Robots for Semiconductor Manufacturing Environment

     			Jean-Claude Latombe
     			Stanford University
     	Center for Integrated Systems Seed Project - Final Report

     The goal of this CIS seed project is investigate the application 
of the concept of "autonomous robot" in a semiconductor manufacturing 
environment. In the first year of our project, we have decided to 
focus our work on the transportation of wafer boxes in a clean room 
environment. In the second year, in order to attract more support, we 
have extended this application to virtually any transportation task in 
an indoor environment.
     The main thrust of our research has been to design a multi-robot 
transportation system. This system is based on the following main 
ideas:
     1. It can operate many (10 or more) robots in the same facility, 
        in order to reduce wasting times and increase reliability of 
        the transportation system.
     2. The system is easily instructed. It accepts high-level goals 
        stating what should be done, rather than how to do it.
     3. A planner/scheduled/monitor assigns tasks to individual 
     	robots, plans and schedules their execution. It also monitors 
     	the progress of the robots.
     4. The overall system is distributed, so that each robot has 
     	partial autonomy. Each robot has some freedom in choosing 
     	tasks and decides its own motions.
     Most of the system has been implemented, although its integration 
is not completed yet. Experiments have been conducted with the various 
implemented components.
*******************************************************************************
     	Economic Issues in Computer Interface Standardization

     			   Garth Saloner
                               MIT
     	     Dept. of Economics and School of Management

     Traditionally, computer vendors have provided a range of mutually 
incompatible systems, both in that machines manufactured by different 
vendors are not easily physically networked and in that peripherals 
and software written for one machine are not easily adapted to 
another. Recently, however, there has been a major trend towards an 
alternative paradigm in which there are no proprietary boundaries 
between the product offerings of different vendors. The goal of the 
proponents of so-called "open systems" is to provide nonproprietary 
standards specifying how the components at the interfaces interact. 
     There are several facets to open systems. First, open systems 
will provide a standardized interface between applications software 
and any vendor's computer. This interface will provide "portability": 
the ability to transfer any software written to comply with that 
interface to any other computer system conforming to the standard. 
Importantly, this "applications environment" could be quite richly 
specified, including specifications of graphics and particulars of the 
user interface, such as the "look and feel" of the display and 
windowing specifications. Second, standard networking protocols would 
be provided allowing seamless inter-computer communication between 
computers conforming to the communications interface. Finally, it 
would provide standard peripheral interfaces.
*******************************************************************************
     			Ways Women Lead

     			Judy B. Rosener
                  Graduate School of Business
                University of California, Irvine

     Women managers who have broken the glass ceiling in medium-sized, 
nontraditional organizations have proven that effective leaders don't 
come from one mold. They have demonstrated that using the 
command-and-control style of managing others, a style generally 
associated with men in large, traditional organizations, is not the 
only way to succeed.
     The women's success shows that a nontraditional leadership style 
is well suited to the conditions of some work environments and can 
increase an organization's chances of surviving in an uncertain world. 
It supports the belief that there is strength in a diversity of 
leadership styles. 
     The men are more likely than the women to describe themselves
in ways that characterize what some management experts call 
"transactional" leadership. That is, they view job performance as a 
series of transactions with subordinates - exchanging rewards for 
services rendered or punishment for inadequate performance. The men 
are also more likely to use power that comes from their organizational 
position and formal authority. The women respondents, on the other 
hand, described themselves in ways that characterize 
"transformational" leadership-getting subordinates to transform their 
own self-interest into the interest of the group through concern for a 
broader goal. Moreover, they ascribe their power to personal 
characteristics like charisma, interpersonal skills, hard work, or 
personal contacts rather than to organizational stature.
***************************************************************************
     		The Concept Database: Multimedia Tool 
        to Support Concurrent Design and Design History Archival

     		Alice M. Agogino and Stephen Bradley
                        Proposal Abstract     	       
               Berkeley Expert Systems Technology Lab.
                 University of California, Berkeley

     They propose to develop a novel computer-aided concurrent design 
tool for assisting engineers during the conceptual phase of design. 
The Concept Database will utilize database, optical disk and new 
multimedia technology to provide the designer with access to a broad 
spectrum of design information which will suggest and describe 
potentially useful design concepts and previous designs. The intent is 
to provide the designer with information needed to produce initial 
designs with better life cycle performance. The tool will (1) push 
life cycle issues to the forefront of the design process, (2) provide 
the information needed to make informed design decisions, (3) 
structure the search for information so that the designer's intent and 
the justification of decisions made during the design process can be 
recorded, and (4) store new designs in the database in such a manner 
that future designers can retrieve the design as a useful example when 
similar situations arise. Current research is focused on methods of 
retrieval from a concept database and support of design decision 
making during concept retrieval. The tool under development will 
support design teams working in a networked workstation environment. 
Emphasis is being given to use of well developed technologies and 
existing standards (such as relational databases and SQL) to insure 
that a practical and scalable system is developed. The target area of 
application for the prototype is the domain of mechanical 
interconnection (fastening and joining) concepts used in electronic 
and computer product mechanical design.
******************************************************************************
     	  Learning Lost: The Problem of Not Accounting for R&D

     			Margaret B.W. Graham

     This paper at one level is an outsider's attempt to contribute a 
footnote to the emerging literature of accounting history. At another 
level it seeks to provide some historical perspective concerning the 
contemporary problems raided by accounting for R&D. She takes as her 
field of interest a broad layman's definition of accounting. For the 
purposes of this paper the term "accounting" refers to that whole 
complex of activities that assign, measure, monitor, report in or out, 
and predict value on behalf of a particular corporation or 
institution. It refers further to the formal systems, mechanisms and 
documents that constitute those activities.
******************************************************************************
     		    Berkeley Image Database Project

     		 University of California at Berkeley
                  Information Systems and Technology
                     Advanced Technology Planning

     The Advanced Technology Planning group at the University of 
California in Berkeley has developed an image-oriented database access 
system that runs on networked workstations and can be used with a 
variety of commercial database management packages. The project 
demonstrates the feasibility of online access to digital images of 
maps, slides, paintings, photographs, rare manuscripts, museum 
artifacts, botanical specimens, and other visual materials.
     The image database software was originally developed on Sun 
workstations and now runs under the X window system on Sun, IBM, 
Digital Equipment, MIPS, and Apple Macintosh Unix workstations. 
Collection data can be organized in flat files or as Ingress, Oracle, 
or Sybase databases. The project addresses issues of fast networking, 
distributed data and processing, massive storage requirements, color 
display and printing, software portability, and non-traditional uses 
of computers.
     Prototype image databases have been developed for the Lowie 
Museum of Anthropology, the University Art Museum, the Architecture 
Slide Library, the Geography Map Library, and the University Herbarium 
at Berkeley.
     Berkeley campus users of the ImageQuery of ImageView software 
include the Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, the Quantitative 
Anthropology Laboratory, the College of Environmental Design, the 
Department of Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, the 
Department of Geography, and the Department of Mechanical Engineering.
     The Apple A/UX Development Group and Ingress Corp. have binary 
demo copies of the software. Commercial source license holders include 
Combustion Engineering, Nippon Steel, Forefront, BellSouth Services, 
NYNEX Corporation, Bellcore, and ARIIS Image & Information Systems 
(Montreal).
Note: If you are interested in sponsoring this project or would like 
      more information, please call the Berkeley Office of Technology 
      Licensing at (415) 643-7201, or Barbara Morgan, Director, 
      Advanced Technology Planning at (415) 642-5567.
**************************************************************************
     	         Safety of the Thermal Protection System 
                     of the Space Shuttle Orbiter: 
             Quantitative Analysis and Organizational Factors

     	             M. Elizabeth Pate-Cornell
       Dept. of Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management
                      Stanford University
                               &
                          Paul S. Fischbeck
       Dept. of Engineering and Public Policy & Dept. of Decision 
                      Carnegie-Mellon University

       Report to The National Aeronautics and Space Administration

Effects of Organizational Factors on TPS Reliability: Main Preliminary 
Observations.
     In the second phase of this work, they explore to what extent 
organizational procedures (for instance, those that induce time 
pressure and turnover of the personnel) are at the root of these 
incidents. Rules that apply uniformly across tiles of widely variable 
risk-criticality, and rules that do not account for the possibility of 
system weakening over time may become major contributors to the 
overall risk. Furthermore, the scope of the research cannot be 
strictly limited to the TPS. Procedures and management decisions 
regarding the maintenance of the insulation of the ET and the SRBs 
also affect the reliability of the tiles since they are a source of 
debris. Finally, in the long term, weakening of the tile system due to 
repeated load cycles, exposure to environmental conditions on the 
ground, or chemical reversion, may become a dominant factor of the 
failure risk. The problem of deterioration over time may not be (and 
is not likely to be) of immediate concern for well-bonded tiles, but 
may become a critical factor of those tiles whose capacities have been 
reduced by defective installation and maintenance. Therefore, in the 
second phase, we will examine closely the procedures of the 
organization, using our PRA model to see how the relative 
contributions of each of these factors affect flight safety.
     In addition, the structure of the organization and its 
peripherals (NASA, plus Lockheed, Rockwell etc.) and the rules that 
determine the relations among these organizations (for example, in 
setting contracts, pay scales, and incentives, as well as schedule and 
budget constraints,) may also effect flight safety to the extent that 
they determine the occurrence and severity of human errors and their 
probabilities of detection. Some organizational improvements (which 
may have been recommended before and ignored for various reasons) may 
have only a minor effect on the reliability of the Orbiter; others may 
be essential soon. Our analytical model will be used to determine 
which of these factors actually affect the probability of failure of 
the tiles (and consequently, or the Orbiter) and by how much. Finally, 
the culture of the organization may also play a role. As we describe 
below, the low status of the tile work may induce low morale among 
some tile technicians. Furthermore, the behaviors of other workers 
towards the tile technicians may be a significant source of additional 
work load and time pressure.
*****************************************************************************
     	 Texas A&M's Program for Automation in Manufacturing

     			  Becky Taylor
                   Digital Equipment Corporation

     Texas A&M's PAM (Program for Automation in Manufacturing) 
conference is a biannual meeting of industry and academia. There are 
10 projects currently funded by the PAM project; 9 companies fund the 
project. My understanding is that "dues" are $35,000 apiece. For this, 
members have access to all results from all projects. The projects 
are not necessarily CS-related; as a matter of fact, most of them are 
not. The following are the projects funded through the summer.
     . 90-01 'Evaluation of Quality, Life and Sensors for Machining of 
              New Materials and Composite Stacks'
     . 90-02 'Drilling of Electronic Circuit Boards'
     . 90-03 'Superplastic Forming Characteristics of 8090 
              Aluminum-Lithium Alloy Reinforced with Silicon Carbide'
     . 90-04 'Understanding and Reducing Machine Errors'
     . 90-05 'A Laser Projection System for Guiding Composite 
              Manufacturing'
     . 90-06 'Modeling and Verification of Long Term Creep in 
              Viscoelastic Materials'
     . 90-07 'A Knowledge and Optimization Based Scheduled for 
              Electronics    
     . 90-08 'A Generalized Approach to Practical Statistical Design 
              for Product Quality and Manufacturability'
     . 90-09 'Integration of JIt and Order Release Strategies by 
              Simulation' 
     . 90-10 'An Automated Procedure for Detection of Noisy and 
              Incipient Failures in Computer Components'
Currently, PAM is comprised of the following members:
     . Bell Helicopter
     . Compaq
     . DEC
     . General Dynamics
     . IBM
     . LTV Aircraft Products Group
     . Naval Weapons
     . TI
     . Westinghouse

     Even though all members have access to all results, each project 
has a primary and one or more support mentors. The primary is supposed 
to provide industry contacts to the researchers to facilitate 
technology transfer as well as real-world 'sanity checking' of the 
research. DEC is primary contact for project #90-07, and is secondary 
contact for project #90-02. 90-07 is due to be installed at the 
Albuquerque assembly facility within the next 6 weeks for field 
testing. 90-02 was funded by the Greenville Manufacturing facility via 
Low-End Systems. LES is no longer involved with PAM; therefore, look 
for DEC primary mentorships of this project to fade after this summer.
     A&M has some needs of DEC in order to successfully complete the 
research on 90-07. Marlin Shopbell of SCIT is the contact and will be 
indentifying who in Albuquerque will be working with the A&M folks to 
install/test the KOBS software. Marlin and I identified the following 
action items, to be followed by by Marlin.
     . Review monthly status with Dr. Malave
     . Identify resource in Albuquerque and hand over to Dr. Malave by 
       February.
     . Plan for installation in Albuquerque over A&M's spring break
Some Environmental 'Asides"
     Compaq is very active in PAM; they have donated a 486 PC as well 
as a server to the program. A&M is, of course eating this up and is 
trying to figure out how to get some hardware from IBM. I predict 
they will angle for an RS/6000.  Question: how long is the 3100 to be 
out there?
     The PAM facilitator, Dr. Don Phillips, has 25 years' experience 
in simulation/modeling, much of which seems applicable to the 
activities out of SEMATECH.
     A&M is attempting to define a concept around building a small 
factory (The Innovation Factory) to provide a more realistic 
environment for teaching, research, technology transfer as well as a 
small amount of manufacturing.
     Texas State Technical Institute (TSTI) out of Waco is attempting 
to setup the Texas Manufacturing Technology Center to provide an 
infrastructure for small manufacturing (500 employees) entities. 
Purpose: technology transfer for small firms that can't afford 
time/employees to track new technologies in order to remain 
competitive. 
     In the area of simulation software, Dr. Phillips referenced 
their AI simulation lab where they are working on an object-oriented 
simulation language. There was no time to check this out last week, 
but perhaps this merits a separate visit relative to SEMATECH's RFP's.

CHIPS
------
     One goal for traveling to A&M was to find out more about a 
software project called CHIPS; it was in field test at AMD here in 
Austin last year and is currently undergoing 'sanity checking' of there 
underlying model at SEMATECH. CHIPS was not funded by PAM; it is a 
separate activity funded by contract to SEMATECH.
     I spent most of Thursday afternoon meeting with Dr. Brian 
Deuermeyer, the individual who is responsible for the modeling 
software comprising the heart of CHIPS. He made it extremely clear 
that CHIPS has become a paper tiger for him and he is ready to turn it 
over to someone interested in productization. After a discussion with 
him, I am of the opinion that CHIPS will require the following (at a 
bare minimum) to produce it:
     . Documentation on current internals from A&M (already planned)
     . (re) Design of CHIPS internals and UI; they currently use
       Athena widgets rather than X widgets
     
     I am unsure of DEC's/SEMATECH's interest in doing this. Rather 
than glaze you eyes with a discussion on whether to do this, reply 
with you interest level in pursuing this further.

Overall Impressions
-------------------
     There would appear to be potential overlap (and also potential 
for a high degree of synergy) between KOBS and the AI work underway at 
MCC. What mechanism currently exists within DEC to ensure we're not 
spending money twice? This is not to imply that we are; I do not claim 
to be intimately familiar with A&M's efforts nor especially conversant 
with MCC's work, though I do make an effort to read the summaries 
which come from Bill Kuhlman. This is to highlight a potential for 
spending money in two areas simultaneously where one expenditure might 
suffice. Who within DEC is tracking this? If no one, do we need someone?
     Overall, DEC is showing many faces to A&M. It is my impression 
that the other folks present have been with the program from the start 
of their company's decision to join PAM. Would we benefit from 
dedicating a second individual to this effort?
     DEC will have an opportunity to define new projects this summer. 
This requires a bit of up front effort in terms of defining what is 
needed. I am assuming that since PAM is manufacturing in orientation 
that this effort will be forthcoming from SCIT. Is this a valid 
assumption?

Note: Becky Taylor
      AUSTIN::TAYLOR
******************************************************************************* 
 		  High-Speed Communication Networks

     	     An Intensive Short Course - April 18-19, 1991
     	Continuing Education in Engineering, University Extension,
       and the College of Engineering, University of Calif. Berkeley

     An intensive short course Thurdsay-Friday, April 18-19, 1991 at 
the San Francisco Airport Hilton. A revolution is taking place in 
communication networks with the development of much faster information 
transport and new communication services.

Course Objective:
     This course provides an overview of the operating and design 
principles of modern communication networks, including a description 
of the major trends. It is of interest to communication engineers who 
desire a self-contained and up-to-date overview of this emerging 
technology.

Participant Background Expected:
     The course stresses descriptions of operating principles over 
formulation. A basic familiarity with communication technology is 
helpful.

Course Content:
     The course begins with an overview of high speed networks and 
their operating principles. Typical performance measures of such 
networks, multiplexing and switching principles, and ATM and SONET are 
discussed. The focus then moves to the optical communication 
technology that is making these high-speed networks possible. The 
discussion of the fibers, optical sources, and receivers is 
self-contained and emphasizes their systems characteristics.
     The course continues with a detailed description of switching. 
The different configurations of high-speed switches and their 
properties are discussed. Local-access networks, such as DQDB and 
FDDI, which will connect users in a metropolitan area to large-scale 
networks, are explored. Multimedia information terminals and 
applications are discussed next. Comments is made on multimedia 
operating systems, databases, and mail. 
     Attention then turns to the Intelligent Network architecture. The 
objective of this architecture - separate control and resources in 
order to increase flexibility and simplify the introduction of new 
serves - is examined. The course concludes by exploring some 
economic considerations of high-speed networks.

Faculty:
     Pravin Varaiya - is Professor of Electrical Engineering and 
Computer Sciences and Professor of Economics at the University of 
California, Berkeley.

     Jean Walrand - is Professor of Electrical Engineering and 
Computer Sciences at the University of California, Berkeley. 

Program:

Thursday, April 18  Overview	
. What are high-speed networks?/Communication services/Multiplexing 
and switching/ATM and SONET/ User access: SMDS and BISDN

Physical Layer
--------------
. Optical link and its characteristics/Fiber attenuation and 
dispersion/Optical sources: LED and LD/Optical detectors: PIN and 
APD/Modulation schemes and sensitivity.

Switching
---------
. Objective and performance measures/Time and space division 
switching/Clos and Benen networks/Fast-packet switching architectures

Friday, April 19

Local-access networks
---------------------
. FDDI, DQDB, HangMAN, SMDS and Frame Relay

Multimedia
----------
. HDTV and integrated terminal/Operating systems/Integrated 
mail/Integrated database

Intelligent Network
--------------------
. POTS and new services IN architecture IN element functionalities 
Functional components

Economics
---------
. Trends/Technology/Demand/Deployment strategies

Schedule
--------
Registration	8-8:30am Thursday, April 18
Lectures	8:30am -12 noon and 1-4:30 pm each day
Lunch		12 noon -1 pm each day
Breaks		10 am and 2:30 pm each day

Location	San Francisco Airport Hilton, San Francisco 
                International Airport

Fee		$695, including course notes and lunch and 
                refreshments each day. Enrollment is limited
     		and advance enrollment is required.

For more enrollment information or questions, call (415) 642-4151,
FAX (415) 643-8683, or write to Continuing Education in Engineering,
University Extension, University of California, 2223 Fulton St.,
Berkeley, CA 94720.
****************************************************************************	
Note: These are two past seminars
                      
                         Innovations in Trading Systems
     	      Berkeley Program in Finance Preliminary Program
                    Spring 1991 Seminar- March 17-19, 1991

Sunday, March 17
. Keynote Address, Gary Ginter - Chicago Research and Trading
Monday, March 18
. Opening Remarks, Mark Garman - Conference Chair
  University of California, Berkeley
Trading Networks and Market Structure:
. Trading Mechanisms in Securities Markets: Theory and Evidence
  Ananth Madhavan, Wharton Business School
. Shackled Liquidity: An Institutional Manifesto,
  Evan Schulman, Lattice Investments, Inc.
. Innovations in Equity Trading: CREF's Experience
  Paul Davis, College Retirement Equities Fund
. Topic: Liquidity Effects of Market Automation
  Albert Kyle and Elliot Moskowitz
The Fuzzy Logic of Investment:
. Understanding Fuzzy Logic Concepts and Methods
  Enrique H. Ruspini, SRI International
. Topic: The Investment Applications of Fuzzy Logic
  Daniel C. Bochsler, Togai InfraLogic
Simulated Trading Environments
. Simulated Option Trading
  Gerard Gennotte and Mark Rubinstein, U.C. Berkeley
Expert Systems for Investment
. Expert Systems as Power Tools for Decision Making:
  The Economic Benefits from the New Knowledge Technology
  Edward Feigenbaum, Stanford University
. Topic: A Language for Implementing Investment - Expert Systems
  Dale Party, Integrated Analytics
. An Alternative to Rule-Based Systems: A Neural Net Approach to 
  Intelligent Investment Decision Support
  Douglas Stone, Frank Russell & Co.
Real-Time Decision Support in Trading
. Fault Tolerance and Real-Time Communications Support for 
  Next-Generation Trading Systems
  Ken Birman, ISIS Distributed Systems/Cornell University
. Linking Analytics and Execution with Quantitative Rule-Based Control
  David Leinweber, Leinweber & Co.

           The CASIS Workshop Seminar - February 25 & 26,91 
   
                       Stanford University
Feb, 25 1991

Session: Data Visualization: 
. M. Levory, "Algorithms and Architectures for Visualizing Volume Data"
. R. Samadani, "Image Information Extraction for Databases and 
Visualization"
. Q Lin, "Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar"
. W. Davis, "Hypermedia Display of Remote Sensing Data"
Session: Networks and Telecommunications:
. W. Wang, " The Christmas Tree: an Output -Queuing Space-Divison
Switching Fabric"
. F. Chiussi, "An 0.8 Micron BiCMOS Sea-of-Gates Implementation of the 
Tandem Banyan Fast Packet Switch"
. F. Paul-Dubois-Taine, "Buffer Management Strategies in ATM Switches 
Carrying Bursty Traffic"
. J. Peha, "Cost-Based Scheduling Algorithms to Support Integrated 
Services in High-Speed Packet Switched Networks"
. J.M. Cioffi aand P.S. Chow, "Network Coding"

Tuesday Feb, 26

Session: Parallel Programming and Architecture
. W. Lynch, "Virtual Memory and Cache Performance"
. A Zimmerman, "The Parallel Architect's Workbench"
. M. Lam, "Evaluation of Parallelization Techniques"
. F.F. Lee, "ALGE: A High Performance Array Processor for 
Three-Dimensional Lattice Gas Simulations"
Session: Programming Environment
. J. Vlissides, "A Grand Tour of interviews 3.0"
Session: Neural Networks
. J. Burr, "Energy in Digital VLSI Neural Networks"
. M. Murray, "The Stanford Boltzmann Engine"
. M. Leung, "Texture Recognition"
Session: Low Power Signal Processing
. J. Burr, E. Tsern, B. Bass, J. Burnham, G. Yeh, "Interleaved 
Processors, Pipelined Memory, and MultiChip Modules"
. V. Roychowdhury, "A New Understanding of Perceptions"
. K.Y. Siu, "Depth-Size Tradeoffs for Neural Computation"
. NASA Caucus
**************************************************************************
XII.		   Automated Paper Request Form

     Below are the papers that are available from the March/April 1991 issue
of WTD. Please send all requests to REESA::HAYES. Please include your mailstop
and the automated paper form. Do not send the entire issue with your request
at the bottom; also if you are ordering papers from past issues, you must
add issue, title and author of paper. Thanks

	[ ] Why Are There So Few Female Computer Scientists?
	[ ] Autonomous Robots For Semiconductor Manufacturing Environment
	[ ] Economic Issues In Computer Interface Standardization
	[ ] Ways Women Lead
	[ ] The Concept Database: Multimedia Tool To Support Concurrent
            Design And Design History Archival
	[ ] Learning Lost: The Problem Of Not Accounting For R&D
	[ ] Safety Of The Thermal Protection System Of The Space Shuttle
            Orbiter: Quantitative Analysis And Organizational Factors
	[ ] Texas A&M'S Program For Automation In Manufacturing
********************************************************************************


Distribution:


TO:
Steve Becker@AQO    DENNIS DICKERSON@DL STEVE DONOVAN@DLO   Tommy Gaut@HSO      
Ed Hurry@DVO        jim rather@HSO      Pat Roach@VBE       Czarena Siebert@HSO 
Mike Sievers@HSO    Dale Stout@HSO      Susan Sugar@MWO     Sherry Williams@HSO 
Mike Willis@HSO     Tom Wilson@HST      

18.3FWD: APRIL-BULLETIN.WTDULYSSE::ROACHTANSTAAFL !Tue Apr 09 1991 15:5570
 

                  I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Date:     08-Apr-1991 08:12pm CET
                                        From:     BEANE
                                                  BEANE@BIGRED@MRGATE@DPD20@DPD
                                        Dept:      
                                        Tel No:    

TO: See Below

Subject: FWD: APRIL-BULLETIN.WTD

From:	HSOMAI::REESA::HAYES "Mary Hayes  05-Apr-1991 1020"    5-APR-1991 13:40:49.48
To:	@WTD
CC:	HAYES
Subj:	APRIL-BULLETIN.WTD


        Feminist Perspectives On Organizational Theory & Research

     			Spring Colloquium Series
                       Graduate School Of Business
                           Stanford University 

     This spring series is offered at no charge through SCOR and the 
Graduate School of Business. All Classes are on Wednesdays, from noon 
to 1:15p.m. Located at the Graduate School of Business, room 79.

April 10th: 
     Sylvia Yanagisako. Anthropology and Feminist Studies, Stanford 
University - "Capital and Gendered Interest in Italian Family Firms".
     Sylvia Yanagisako is an Associate Professor of Anthropology and 
Director of the Program in Feminist Studies at Stanford University. 
Her major research has focused on kinship, gender and societal class, 
specifically among Seattle Japanese-Americans and family firms in the 
silk-weaving industry of Como, Italy. She earned a Ph.D. in 
Socio-Cultural Anthropology from the University of Washington.
     This talk addresses the transformation of women's and men's 
interest in capital accumulation in family firms in northern Italy. 
Family firms are treated as complex structures of production, 
reproduction, love, power, and nurturance, which are constituted and 
transformed along with the desires and strategies of their members. 
The focus is on the gendered character of this changing complex 
because gender is central to production of social actors and their 
desires in capitalist firms.

May 8th:
     Faye Crosby. Psychology, Smith College - "Discrimination and 
Reverse Discrimination: Fantasies, Illusions, and the Cold Hard Truth"

May 15th:
     Ella Bell. Management, University of Massachusetts, Amherst-
"Life Journeys of Women in Corporations"

May 29th:
     Marta Calas. Management, University of Massachusetts, Amherst -
"Haciendo Punto en Orto Son: Re-presenting the Other in International 
Management".

Distribution:


TO:
Steve Becker@AQO    DENNIS DICKERSON@DL STEVE DONOVAN@DLO   Tommy Gaut@HSO      
Ed Hurry@DVO        jim rather@HSO      Pat Roach@VBE       Czarena Siebert@HSO 
Mike Sievers@HSO    Dale Stout@HSO      Susan Sugar@MWO     Sherry Williams@HSO 
Mike Willis@HSO     Tom Wilson@HST      

18.4CRL - Stanford DASH - ReminderULYSSE::ROACHTANSTAAFL !Thu Apr 18 1991 17:5487
 

                  I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Date:     17-Apr-1991 01:57am CET
                                        From:     TSS
                                                  TSS@AIADM@SELECT@HERON@ULYSSE@MRGATE@VALMTS@VBO
                                        Dept:      
                                        Tel No:    

TO:  PATRICK ROACH@VBE


Subject: CRL - Stanford DASH - Reminder

From:	AIADM::CRL::MARYG "Mary Gallagher" 15-APR-1991 10:00:10.42
To:	aiadm::tss 
CC:	
Subj:	REMINDER - Design of the Stanford DASH Multiprocessor - Digital Cambridge Research Lab - Apr 19 

                     Digital Equipment Corporation
                        Cambridge Research Lab 
                               Seminar
 
                         Friday, April 19, 1991
                  3:15pm - 4:15pm, Refreshments at 3:00pm
 
	       "Design of the Stanford DASH Multiprocessor"
 
			    Anoop Gupta
		     Computer Systems Laboratory
			 Stanford University
 
The Stanford DASH project represents an experiment in understanding the
scalability issues for shared-memory multiprocessors.  The fundamental
premise behind DASH is that it is feasible to build large-scale
single-address-space multiprocessors with coherent caches.  The scalable
memory bandwidth in DASH is achieved by distributing main memory among the
processing nodes and by interconnecting the nodes with a scalable network.
The coherent caches are supported using a distributed directory-based
cache-coherence protocol.  Globally coherent caches significantly reduce the
latency of accesses to shared data objects thus yielding higher processor
utilization and higher overall performance.  Additional mechanisms to hide
the latency of remote accesses and to support efficient synchronization are
also provided.  
 
We are currently building a DASH prototype.  The prototype will consist of
16-64 MIPS R3000/R3010 processors delivering up to 1600 MIPS and 600 scalar
MFLOPS.  The interconnection network consists of a pair of meshes, each with
16-bit wide channels.  There is considerable support provided for
performance monitoring.  A 16 processor version of the prototype has been
built and is currently being debugged.  With luck, I should be able to
report on some preliminary performance results.
 
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dr. Anoop  Gupta is an Assistant Professor of Computer Science at Stanford
University.  Prior to joining Stanford, he was on the research faculty of
Carnegie Mellon University, where he received his Ph.D. in 1986.  Professor
Gupta's primary interests are in the design of hardware and software for
large scale multiprocessors.  He is currently leading the design and
construction of the DASH multiprocessor at Stanford.  He has also worked
extensively in the area of parallel applications.  Professor Gupta was the
recipient of a DEC faculty development award from 1987-1989, and he received
the NSF Presidential Young Investigator Award in 1990.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
Digital Equipment Corporation's Cambridge Research Lab is located on the
north side of Technology Square, at the junction of Hampshire Street and 
Broadway.  The address is:
 
     Digital Equipment Corporation
     Cambridge Research Lab
     One Kendall Square, Bldg. 700
     Cambridge, MA 02139
 
For questions regarding the seminar, directions, or parking, or to add 
your name to the mailing list, call DTN: 259-6601 or send email to 
CRL::TSS
 
% ====== Internet headers and postmarks (see DECWRL::GATEWAY.DOC) ======
Received: by easynet.crl.dec.com; id AA25361; Mon, 15 Apr 91 09:56:04 -0400
Message-Id: <[email protected]>
To: aiadm::tss
Subject: REMINDER - Design of the Stanford DASH Multiprocessor - Digital Cambridge Research Lab - Apr 19
Date: Mon, 15 Apr 91 09:56:10 EDT
From: maryg

18.5FWD: Western Technology DigestULYSSE::ROACHTANSTAAFL !Mon May 06 1991 11:06208
 

                  I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Date:     01-May-1991 06:55pm CET
                                        From:     BEANE
                                                  BEANE@BIGRED@MRGATE@DPD03@DPD
                                        Dept:      
                                        Tel No:    

TO: See Below

Subject: FWD: Western Technology Digest

********************************************************************************
*****                  WESTERN TECHNOLOGY DIGEST                           *****
****                  VOLUME 4		 NUMBER 5			    ****
***                     MAY               1991                              ***
**                   Mary Hayes 	 Editor                               **
********************************************************************************
 
WESTERN TECHNOLOGY DIGEST is a monthly technology transfer forum for 
communicating research, technical, and competitive information between 
Digital and research communities.
		
		********************************
 
THIS MAGAZINE IS RESTRICTED FOR INTERNAL USE ONLY BY EMPLOYEES OF DIGITAL 
EQUIPMENT CORPORATION.  @ Copyright Digital Equipment Corporation 1987, 1988,
1989, 1990, 1991.
*******************************************************************************
  
The purpose of WTD is to inform Digital readers of events and activities of
interest in the research community.  The style of this digest will be to 
provide abstracts or short articles of interest with references to more 
detailed information for you to pursue should you wish to follow-up.
 
We welcome contributions from anyone who is sponsoring research, doing
work. 
 
We also encourage comments from readers and Letters to the Editor, which
will be published with the author's permission.
 
If you wish to subscribe to WTD or change your subscription address
or to submit papers or articles please send mail to REESA::HAYES

If you wish to receive copies of the articles mentioned in WTD, please send
all requests to REESA::HAYES. Please include your mail stop as the articles
are sent in hard copy format. Also please note, if you are ordering copies
of articles from past issues, you must but the issue, title and authors name.
********************************************************************************
 
			    MAY WTD BULLETIN

	* A WORD FROM YOUR EDITOR:

	   During this time of transition, a lot of you are moving
           around the company. Please take a moment and let me know if you
	   have changed your address. Please send email to REESA::HAYES
	   and I will update my distribution list.
   
*****************************************************************************
     		       Berkeley Program in Finance
                        Spring 1991 Tokyo Seminar

     	         Securitization in Fixed Income Markets:
                New Developments in Financial Engineering
 
                    Tokyo Bay Hilton International
                           May 27-30, 1991

     As you can see from the preliminary program, they have assembled 
an impressive list of speakers for the upcoming seminar. These 
speakers, both academics and practitioners, will provide in-depth 
analyses of new developments in quantitative fixed-income modeling, 
and institutional considerations and trends in asset securitization. 
Among the specific quantitative topics to be covered are: recent 
advances in term structure modeling in the United States and Japan, 
innovations in bond options and bond option pricing models, the 
economic motivation for valuation of swap transactions, and the 
pricing of timing and quality options in futures contracts. Speakers 
will also discuss the structure of and historical experience with 
mortgage and non-mortgage asset-backed securities in the United States 
and Japan, the structure of the Japanese financial system and its 
likely impact on the growth of securitization, and some of the legal 
aspects affecting securitization in Japan. The mandate of each speaker 
is to convey even technical results in nontechnical language 
accessible to practitioners. There will be simultaneous translation 
between English and Japanese. Each Participant will receive a binder 
of the exhibits used by each speaker.
     The seminar fee is $2,610 if payment is made by May 6, 1991, and 
$2,900 if payment is made after this date.

Monday, May 27, 1991

Welcome Buffet

Tuesday, May 28, 1991

Institutional Trends and Developments in Asset Securitization.

9:00-9:05 am
Welcome and Introduction, David Modest, University of California at 
Berkeley.

9:05-9:45
Trends and Developments in U.S. Asset-Backed Securitization, David 
Modest, U.C. Berkeley.

9:45-10:30
The Japanese Mortgage System, Ulrike Schaede, Hitotsubashi University, 
Tokyo and University of Marburg.

10:45-11:30
Legal Aspects of Securitization in Japan, Masaru Ono, Nishimura/Sanada

11:30-12:15pm
Securities Financing in Japan, Ulrike Schaede.

1:45-2:30
Trends in Securitization in Japan, Toshihiro Mori, Goldman Sachs

2:30-3:15
Problems in Japanese Securitization, Katsuhiko Takita, Nippon Credit 
Bank.

3:15-4:00
Asset Securitization: The Japanese Investors' Perspective, TBA

4:15-5:00
The Economics of Securitization in Japan, Yoshitsugu Kanemoto, 
University of Tokyo.

5:00-5:45
The Pricing of Securitized Debt, Robert Wolfe, Goldman Sachs.

5:45-6:15
Program Summery, Albert Kyle, U.C. Berkeley.

Wednesday, May 29, 1991

Recent Advances and Developments in Fixed-Income Modeling

9:00-10:00am
Pricing Interest Rate Contingent Claims, Bjorn Flesaker, University of 
Illinois.

10:00-11:00
The Term Structure of Interest Rates in Japan, Kenneth Singleton, 
Stanford University.

11:15-12:15pm
Innovations in Bond Options, Kenneth Singleton.

1:45-2:45
Estimation and Testing of an Interest Rate Option Pricing Model, Bjorn 
Flesaker.

2:45-3:45
Mortgage Pricing Models: The Current State of Academic Research, David 
Modest.

4:00-5:00
ARM Prepayment in Theory and Practice: Justifying Backward and Forward 
Path Dependence in a Hazard Function, Nancy Wallace, U.C. Berkeley.

5:00-6:00
Determinants of Residential Housing Prices in the Bay Area 1970-1988: 
Effects of Fundamental Economic Factors or Speculative Bubbles, Nancy 
Wallace.

6:00-6:30
Program Summary, Hayne Leland, U.C. Berkeley.

Thursday, May 30, 1991

9:00-10:00
The Valuation of Swaps, Suresh Sundaresan, Columbia University

10:00-11:00
The Economic Analysis of Swap Transactions, Setsuya Sato, The Bank of 
Japan.

11:15-12:15
The Pricing of Timing and Quality Options, Suresh Sundaresan.

12:15-12:45
Program Summary, Albert Kyle, U.C. Berkeley.


To receive a seminar registration form or to get more information, 
please contact, Mical Ellen Visher, Assistant Director
                Berkeley Program in Finance in Asia
                350 Barrows Hall
                Haas School of Business
                Berkeley CA. 94720 
                Phone: 415-642-0114
                FAX: 415-643-8460

Distribution:


TO:
DENNIS DICKERSON@DL STEVE DONOVAN@DLO   Tommy Gaut@HSO      Ed Hurry@DVO        
Louis Pau@VBE       jim rather@HSO      Pat Roach@VBE       Czarena Siebert@HSO 
Mike Sievers@HSO    Dale Stout@HSO      Susan Sugar@MWO     Sherry Williams@HSO 
Mike Willis@HSO     Tom Wilson@HST      

18.6FWD: MAY-WTD 1991ULYSSE::ROACHTANSTAAFL !Tue May 21 1991 13:57601
 

                  I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Date:     17-May-1991 03:59pm CET
                                        From:     BEANE
                                                  BEANE@17383@MRGATE@DPD03@DPD
                                        Dept:      
                                        Tel No:    

TO: See Below

Subject: FWD: MAY-WTD 1991

********************************************************************************
*****                  WESTERN TECHNOLOGY DIGEST                           *****
****                  VOLUME 4		 NUMBER 6			    ****
***                     MAY              1991                                ***
**                   Mary Hayes 	 Editor                               **
********************************************************************************
 
WESTERN TECHNOLOGY DIGEST is a monthly technology transfer forum for 
communicating research, technical, and competitive information between 
Digital and research communities.
		
		********************************
 
THIS MAGAZINE IS RESTRICTED FOR INTERNAL USE ONLY BY EMPLOYEES OF DIGITAL 
EQUIPMENT CORPORATION.  @ Copyright Digital Equipment Corporation 1987, 1988,
1989, 1990, 1991.
*******************************************************************************
  
The purpose of WTD is to inform Digital readers of events and activities of
interest in the research community.  The style of this digest will be to 
provide abstracts or short articles of interest with references to more 
detailed information for you to pursue should you wish to follow-up.
 
We welcome contributions from anyone who is sponsoring research, doing
work. 
 
We also encourage comments from readers and Letters to the Editor, which
will be published with the author's permission.
 
If you wish to subscribe to WTD or change your subscription address
or to submit papers or articles please send mail to REESA::HAYES

If you wish to receive copies of the articles mentioned in WTD, please send
all requests to REESA::HAYES. Please include your mail stop as the articles
are sent in hard copy format. Also please note, if you are ordering copies
of articles from past issues, you must but the issue, title and authors name.
********************************************************************************
			TABLE OF CONTENTS 
			THIS ISSUE = 

I.	The Economics of Alternative Integrated Circuit Manufacturing
	Technology: A Framework and Appraisal - W. Edward Steinmueller

II.	Modeling the Perormance of Cluster-Based Fabs
	- Samuel Wood & Krishna Saraswat

III.	Representing Probabilistic Knowledge in Relational Databaes
	- Thierry Barsalou, R. Martin Chavez, & Gio Wiederhold

	Hypertext Interface for Decision-Support Systems: A Case Study
	- Thierry Barasalou, R. Martin Chavez, & Gio Wiederhold

	Knowledge-Directed Mediation Between Application Objects and
	Base Data - Thierry Baralou & Gio Wiederhold

	Outer Joins and Filters for Instantiating Object from
	Relational Databases through Views
	- Gio Wiederhold & Byung Suk Lee

	Knowledge-Based Mapping of Relations into Objects
	Thierry Barsalou & Gio Wiederhold

	Updating Relational Databases through Object-Based Views
	- Thierry Barsalou, Gio Wiederhold, Niki Siambela,
	Arthur Keller

	Management of Complex Structural Engineering Objects
	in a Relational Framework - Gio Wiederhold, Kincho Law,
	Thierry Barsalou

IV.	Manufacturing in the 21 Century at Stanford University
	Slide Presentations

V.	SIMA - Stanford Integrated Manufacturing Associates
	Proposals

VI.	Automated Paper Request Form	

*****************************************************************************
              The Economics of Alternative Integrated Circuit
            Manufacturing Technology: A Framework and Appraisal
     
     			Dr. W. Edward Steinmueller
          Deputy Director of Center for Economic Policy Research
     			Stanford University

     For twenty years, the U.S. circuit (IC) industry led the world in 
developing new process techniques and product designs. During the past 
decade, the hegemony of the U.S. IC industry disappeared with the 
rapid technological and economic ascendancy of Japanese electronics 
and IC firms. The rapid ascent of Japanese competition has led many 
analysts and industry participants to question the long term 
survivability of the U.S. IC industry. One set of explanations offered 
for the reversal of the U.S. IC industry's fortunes focuses on the 
successful Japanese implementation of strategic trade and technology 
development policies in disrupting the "food chain" of the U.S. IC 
industry. Instances of the outcomes of these policies include loss of 
U.S. position in downstream markets such as consumer electronics, the 
continuing modest penetration of U.S. produced ICs in the growing 
Japanese electronic system market, and the intense pressure on U.S. 
semiconductor capital goods suppliers by relatively new Japanese 
competitors.
     This paper examines additional options available for U.S. IC 
producers based on alternative IC manufacturing technologies such as 
microfactories. These alternative technologies address the issues of 
capital cost and therefore capacity races, design variety, component 
and system product differentiation and military electronics 
requirements. They appear to offer opportunities for restoring 
American's technological leadership by building strength in 
specialized markets in the course of developing technologies that will 
be increasingly useful in all IC markets as we approach the turn of 
the century. Before we examine microfactories specifically, however, 
it is essential to understand why the existing strategic options 
appear to be inadequate in offering viable options for the restoration 
of U.S. IC industry leadership.
*******************************************************************************
     	    Modeling The Performance Of Cluster-Based Fabs

     	        Samuel C. Wood & Krishna C. Saraswat
     		        Stanford University
                 CIS- Center for Integrated Systems

     Open-architecture cluster tools are likely to gain an 
increasingly important role in semiconductor manufacturing. The 
growing importance of the tools are due to a variety of perceived 
advantages, including economic performance, which is the topic of this 
paper. The economic performance of cluster-tools is evaluated by 
modeling a hypothetical cluster-based fab, where almost all of a 0.6um 
DRAM process flow is performed in cluster tools. Similarly, a 
conventional fab under the same cost constraint running the same flow 
is also modeled as a base for comparison. From this model, a number of 
inherent differences between cluster-based fabs and conventional fabs 
are observed and described.
     Monte carlo cost-based simulations are than run on the two fabs 
to compare the potential cost and throughput time (or cycle time) 
performance of the fabs. Results suggest that the cluster-based fab 
can operate at considerably reduced throughput times for a relatively 
small cost per wafer premium. These results are particularly sensitive 
to assumptions regarding equipment costs and wafer handling times in 
the cluster. Modeling the cluster-based fab revealed a number of fab 
design and management issues that are much less significant or 
nonexistent for conventional fabs. These issues include configuration 
and scheduling, lot size, and scaling the fab. These observations 
suggest that cluster-based fabs, if they come into existence, will 
need to be designed and run differently than conventional fabs.
******************************************************************************
      Representing Probabilistic Knowledge in Relational Databases

     	 Thierry Barsalou, R. Martin Chavez, & Gio Wiederhold
                       Stanford University

     As knowledge bases are enlarged to support more complex classes 
of problems, expert systems will demand efficient knowledge-management 
techniques-techniques that are already available in database systems. 
In this paper, they present the design of a database schema suitable 
for knowledge bases that employ a decision-network representation. 
Using this schema, they describe the process of translating existing 
knowledge bases into relational format. Although exploratory in 
nature, there work indicates that the application of database 
techniques offers numerous advantages over an ad-hoc scheme for 
managing probabilistic knowledge bases.

     Hypertext Interfaces For Decision-Support Systems: A Case Study

     	 Thierry Barsalou, R. Martin Chavez, & Gio Wiederhold
                       Stanford University
                   Stanford School of Medicine

     Decision-support systems require intuitive human interfaces that 
maximize the flow of information between machine and user. They describe 
the use of hypertext authoring tools for designing high-grade 
interfaces to PENGUIN, a database system extended with structural 
semantics, and to KNET, a shell for constructing probabilistic expert 
systems. The interface designer uses hypertext tools to construct a 
visual representation of the underlying database or knowledge base. 
They demonstrate that the separation of the hypertext interface from 
the computational engine expedites the development of applications 
that merge expert-system and relational-database technologies.

   Knowledge-Directed Mediation Between Application Objects And Base Data

     		Thierry Barsalou and Gio Wiederhold
                        Stanford University

     Integration of database and artificial-intelligence methods is 
critical for the next generation of information systems. In this 
paper, they offer a conceptual framework for such systems. They 
envision a partitioned architecture where multiple applications 
residing on distributed workstations exploit multiple remote data 
resources. Central to the model is an intermediate layer of mediators 
that perform the knowledge-based task of transforming data into 
information needed by the workstation applications. To illustrate this 
notion, they introduce, a specific mediator, implemented in the 
PENGUIN system, that defines an object-based layer on top of relational 
database systems.

        Outer Joins And Filters For Instantiating Objects From 
                Relational Databases Through Views

     	         Gio Wiederhold and Byung Suk Lee
                       Stanford University

     One of the approaches for integrating an object-oriented programs 
with databases is to instantiate objects from relational databases by 
evaluating view queries. In that approach, it is often necessary to 
evaluate some joins of the query by left outer joins to prevent 
information loss caused by the tuples discarded by inner joins. It is 
also necessary to filter some relations with selection conditions to 
prevent the retrieval of unwanted nulls. 
     The system should automatically prescribe joins as inner or left 
outer joins and generate the filters, rather than letting it be 
specified manually for every view definition. They developed such a 
mechanism in this paper. To overcome the heterogeneity of an 
object-oriented model and the relational model, they first developed a 
rigorous system model. The system model provides a well-defined 
context for developing a simple mechanism.
     The mechanism requires only one piece of information from users: 
null options on an object attribute. The semantics of these options 
are mapped to referential integrity constraints on the query result. 
Then the system prescribes joins and generates filters accordingly. 
They also address reducing the number of left outer joins and the 
filters so that the query can be processed more efficiently.

     	Knowledge-Based Mapping Of Relations into Objects

     	     Thierry Barsalou and Gio Wiederhold
     	            Stanford University

     Database and expert systems share a common goal-generating useful 
information for action- but accomplish their tasks separately, using 
different principles. It is clear, however, that database systems can 
gain expressive power by using artificial intelligence techniques. The 
object-oriented paradigm currently receives much attention as such a 
method to develop enhanced database management systems (DBMSs). In 
this paper, they show that the increased power can be achieved by 
superimposing an object-based interface onto a relational DBMS. For 
this purpose, they exploit knowledge of the database structure to 
automatically map relations into object templates, where each template 
can be a complex combination of join and projection operations. Once 
created, the objects are declaratively instantiated using data from 
the base relations. This domain-independent architecture provides a 
clear separation between storage and working representations and 
offers sharable access to information and multiple views of the same 
data. In the context of a biomedical engineering application, the FACS 
instrument for analyzing and sorting cell suspensions, they 
demonstrate the capabilities of a prototype implementation of this 
architecture.

      Updating Relational Databases Through Object-Based Views

  Thierry Barsalou, Gio Wiederhold, Niki Siambela & Arthur M. Keller
     			Stanford University

     The view-object model provides a formal basis for representing 
and manipulating object-based views on relational databases. In this 
paper, they present a scheme for handling update operations on view 
objects. Because a typical view object encompasses multiple relations. 
They are facing a problem analogous to the issue of updating through 
relational views. A view-object update request must be translated into 
valid operations on the underlying relational database. Building on an 
existing approach to update relational views, they introduce 
algorithms to enumerate all valid translations of the various update 
operations on view objects. The process of choosing a translator for 
view-object update then occurs at view-object generation time. Once 
chosen, the translator can disambiguate any update request on the view 
object.

     	Management of Complex Structural Engineering Objects 
                   in a Relational Framework

     	   Gio Wiederhold, Kincho H. Law & Thierry Barsalou
     Dept. of Civil Engineering/Computer Science/Medical Informatics
                     Stanford University

     To structure the development of an integrated building design 
environment, the global representation of the design data may best be 
organized in terms of hierarchies of objects. In structural 
engineering design they deal with large sets of independent but 
interrelated objects. These objects are specified by data. For an 
engineering design data base the system must be able to model the 
objects composing the design as well as to manage effectively the 
design data. The data base management system therefore needs to have 
some knowledge of the intended use of the data, and must provide an 
abstraction mechanism to represent and manipulate objects. Much recent 
research in engineering data base focuses on object management for 
specific tasks but gives little attention to the shareability of the 
underlying information. This paper describes an architecture for the 
management of complex engineering objects in a sharable, relational 
framework. Potential application of this approach to object management 
for structural engineering analysis and design is discussed.
*******************************************************************************
 	Manufacturing in the 21 Century at Stanford 
University, held there annual review on May 20,21 & 22, 1991. Below are a 
list of slide presentations that are available through WTD. 

1.	A Real Time Control System For Semiconductor Equipment
     	G.F. Franklin - Stanford University

2.	Knowledge Service, Library and Software Integration
     	Jeff Y.C. Pan - Stanford University

3. 	Structured User Interface Builder and Applying it to CIM
     	Steven Tang, Ernest Wood & John Vlissides - Stanford University

4. 	SPIDER - A Bridge to Lab Operations
     	Ernest Wood - Stanford University

5.	Dynamic Global Schema Integration: A Framework for 
        Semiconductor Manufacturing Database Integration & Evolution
     	Shailesh Agarwal, Krishna Saraswat, Gio Wiederhold, Ernest 
        Wood & Arthur Keller - Stanford University

6.	Manufacturing Science: The Virtual Factory - The Stanford 
        Program in Semiconductor Manufacturing
     	Plummer, Wong, McVittie, Ray, Koehler, Wood & Goossens

7.	Semiconductor Manufacturing Research Program - Students 
     	Project Summaries

8.	Properties of Si-Based Epitaxial Layers and Superlattices
     	M.A. Nicolet, T. Vreeland, Jr. - Stanford University and
     	K.L. Wang, R.P.G. Karunasiri - UCLA

9.	TI/AIR force MMST Review: Overview of the Stanford Research 
        Program on Advanced Micro Factory
     	Krishna Saraswat - Stanford University

10. 	On-Site Process Monitoring Techniques Using Acoustic Waves
     	B.T. Khuri-Yakub, K.C. Saraswat, Y.J. Lee, Sanjay Bhardwaj-
        Stanford University

11.	Semiconductor Manufacturing Research - Background, Motivation, 
        and Overview
     	Paul Losleben - Stanford University

12.	Advanced Visualization Techniques for Semiconductor Device 
        Simulation
     	Umberto Ravaioli & Karl Hess - University of Illinois

13.	SPEEDIE Progress Report
     	James P. McVittie, Juan Rey & Krishna Saraswat - Stanford 
        University
*******************************************************************************
SIMA- Stanford Integrated Manufacturing Associates have asked Digital
(along with the other companies who are on its Industrial Council) 
to evaluate proposals for next academic year's proposal granting 
process. Listed below abstracts of the proposals. Anyone interested 
in evaluating relevant proposals may do so by contacting Mary Hayes 
at REESA::HAYES and listing the proposals you want to evaluate, 
your full name, Organization, DTN and MailStop.

1.	Integrated Model for Optimizing Equipment for a Production 
Line.
     What we propose to build is an integrated "executive " planning 
model for use in negotiations between those who purchase equipment for 
producing chips and electronic boards and those who manufacture the 
equipment of this purpose. Given the design characteristics, either 
prespecified or as parameters (to be varied), the integrated 
optimization model will consist of a "capital equipment" part 
representing the different ways basic machine components may be 
combined and configured to produce the equipment and a 
"production-line" part simulator that generates the schedule or 
production and measures operating costs, through-put, process 
dependability, and product reliability. The model, by generating a 
coordinated, efficient, and timely plan for change, is expected to 
help U.S. industry survive fierce foreign competition by adapting more 
quickly to rapid technological change, quality improvement, on-time 
delivery and lower costs.
2.	A Knowledge-Based Approach to Finite Element Analysis.
     The innovation expected during the efforts carried out on this 
project relate primary to the integration of expert system technology 
into Mechanical Design and Finite Element Analysis (FEA). The 
resulting software will provide an efficient 3-D design tool that will 
make expert skills available to the novice user without requiring an 
exhaustive background in FE theory and Terminology. This availability 
is likely to reduce design time and productivity. The Design 
Representation System developed as part of this work will represent 
the design in a format that may be addressed by a variety of other 
applications. Feature-based design is gaining popularity and the 
intended generality of the DRS will represent an advance in this 
domain.
3.	Integrate Design, Manufacturing and Marketability.	
The proposal is to deliver the prototype IDMM course, jointly 
listed and jointly taught in the School of Engineering and the 
Graduate School of Business, that requires teams of business and 
engineering students to work through a design problem for a product 
that will be evaluated by a market reaction to the product's quality, 
price and performance characteristics. Course development has been 
partially supported by SIMA AY1990-1991. This proposal seeks the 
funding necessary to complete development and delivery of the 
prototype course, and to actively revise the course as needed based on 
our initial teaching experience.
4. 	Building Core Competence in the Manufacturing Enterprise.
Proposed is the development of a course that will emphasize the 
integration of management, engineering and technology utilization in 
building a successful manufacturing enterprise. The main theme of this 
course is that a manufacturer can become a first rate competitor in 
today's dynamic environment by investing strategically in building its 
"core competence" and continuously seeking out, tactically, new 
opportunities to apply its core competence to secure a competitive 
position. In most cases, such new opportunities arise as the industry 
undergoes a structural change.
5.	A Quantitative Measure of Flexible Manufacturing.
Proposed is a one year research project to develop a quantitative 
theory on flexibility that is applicable to different situations 
within a manufacturing enterprise. This includes, for example, 
flexible manufacturing equipment that can be easily shifted from 
production of one product to another, a flexible design process that 
allows easy design adjustments in response to marketing feedback, a 
flexible workforce that can be shifted between jobs while keeping 
efficiency, etc. This research will establish the notion of 
flexibility as a structural concept instead of an operations concept: 
the degree of flexibility is measured by the capability of an 
organization to change its structure and/or policy in a short period 
of time in order to respond to unanticipated exogenous variations. A 
model will be developed that allows one to assess, quantitatively, the 
costs and benefits of a certain degree of flexibility. The theory will 
then be applied to specific cases.
6.	Vertical Integration of an Autonomous Multi-Hand Assembly.
The goal of our project is to advance assembly automaton well beyond 
the current state of the art. To do this, we propose a new set of 
integrated system research in task planning, motion planning and 
sensory-based object motion control. An outcome of the project we 
propose here will be the demonstration of a vertically integrated 
assembly station made of cooperating manipulators. We plan to 
demonstrate our research results with mechanical assemblies including 
both rigid and deformable parts. The input to the assembly station 
will consists of a CAD model of the components of an assembly product, 
together with the spatial and fastening relations among these 
components in the product. The station will automatically figure out 
the assembly sequence and the motions of the parts, and perform the 
assembly automatically.
7.	Supply Chain Management.
A supply chain is a network of facilities that perform the functions 
of procurement of materials, transformation of materials to 
intermediate and finished products, and distribution of finished 
products to customers. Managing a supply chain effifiently to meet 
high levels of customers service is a major challenge, due to the 
complexity of the network, the interdependence in performance among 
different sites, decentralized management control coupled with 
organizational barriers, the existence of uncertainties in demand, 
process and supply, and the complex role of buffer inventories at 
different sites of the supply chain. This research proposes to develop 
analytical models to characterize the interrelationships between 
different sites in a supply chain. Such models can provide an explicit 
relationship between inventory stocking policies and allocation of 
safety stocks in a supply chain, as well as to evaluate opportunities 
and options to improve the overall efficiency of the supply chain. 
Some examples of such opportunities include: new product or process 
design, network redesign, transportation mode changes, cycle time 
reduction, and reduction in variability.
8.	The Diffusion of JIT in U.S. Manufacturing.
This proposal requests SIMA support for research on the diffusion of 
Just-in-Time (JIT) in U.S. manufacturing. The proposed research 
examines the manufacturing environment in which JIT spread and the 
academic environment in which researcher studied JIT. This approach 
integrates manufacturing practice, production theory, and 
organizational research using diffusion of innovations and 
institutional theory as a framework. The objective of the study is to 
understand how techniques such as JIT originate, diffuse through 
industry, and are modified as they diffuse. We will also try to 
understand the role of academia, in general, and the role of the field 
of industrial engineering, in particular. The research includes both 
case study research, providing evidence from JIT implementation, and 
data analysis, focusing on the board stream of production research in 
which JIT spread.
9.	Transfer of Training in Engine Manufacture: A Comparison of 
Ford and Nissan in their Home Countries and in Mexico.
Training is an important interface between manufacturing technology 
and management, as it is the means by which the labor force (at all 
levels) learns how to function in the production system. We propose 
that SIMA support an investigation for the transfer of training by 
Ford and Nissan from their home country engine plants to their Mexican 
engine plants.
10.	A Field Study of Diversity, Conflict, and Performance in 
Multifunctional Teams.
Today's manufacturing managers are not only dealing with ethnic and 
gender diversity due to changes in the workforce, but they must also 
mange functional diversity, as cross-functional interaction is 
becoming critical for product development. The proposed research 
builds on a preliminary investigation which, through a series of 
interviews, examined the nature of conflict resulting from functional 
diversity on project teams.
11.	An Integrated Spreadsheet Modeling Environment for The 
Stanford Manufacturing Models Laboratory (MML)
The electronic spreadsheet, augmented by quantitative analysis tools, 
and recently available technology for providing real-time data from 
the factory floor, presents an important new environment for 
manufacturing models. If offers the advantages of:
     . Low Cost/Ease of integration of diverse analytical tools
     . Ease of integration of sub modes into larger models
     . Access to vast amounts of data, including real-time data
     . Wide managerial acceptance.
The goals of the project are to establish a research test-bed for 
manufacturing techniques beneficial to industry, a library of data and 
models available to students and industry, a seminar series to apprise 
industry of technological developments, a set of teaching materials 
available throughout Stanford on low cost PC's.
12.	The Application of Queuing Theory to the Design of Production 
Line Systems with Variable Processing Times.
The focus is on the design of production line systems where there is 
considerable inherent variability in the processing times at 
individual stations. This variability substantially decreases the 
production rate because it frequently causes temporary blocking or 
starving along the line. Using the powerful technique of queuing 
theory, we have made some exciting discoveries about ways to increase 
the production rate substatially (ranging upwards of 20%) with no 
increase in capital or operating costs by using innovative designs 
that minimize blocking and starving. These designs frequently 
unbalance the allocation of work to stations, the allocation of work 
to stations, the allocation of storage to buffers between stations, 
and the allocation of extra processing units to some stations.
13.	Simulation and Analysis of Highly Reliable Systems.
We propose to continue our work on the development of simulation 
algorithms for the analysis of highly reliable systems. Our initial 
SIMA grant only began on Jan, 1, 1991. We have identified several new 
research topics in highly reliable system simulation with personnel at 
IBM. We are exploring other topics in simulation and stochastic 
modeling with personnel at DEC, Ford and GM. Topic being discussed 
include validation of computer simulations and stochastic modeling of 
manufacturing systems and the evaluation of future product designs. In 
this effort we expect to draw on our knowledge and experience in 
simulation output analysis, gradient estimation, and queuing theory. 
We expect to become an integral part of the SIMA Modeling and 
Simulation Laboratory.
14.	Real-time, Model-based Reasoning for Intelligent Process 
Management.
We request continuation funding for research to improve industrial 
process-management and processautomation capabilities of 
computer-integrated manufacturing (CIM) systems. Our project focuses 
on monitoring and control of manufacturing in the process industry, in 
particular, aluminum manufacturing.
*******************************************************************************
VI.		   Automated Paper Request Form

     Below are the papers that are available from the May 1991 issue
of WTD. Please send all requests to REESA::HAYES. Please include your 
mailstop and the automated paper form. Do Not send back the entire WTD 
with your request at the bottom; also if you are ordering papers from
past issues, you must add issue, title and author of paper. Thanks.

	[ ] The Economics of Alternative Integrated Circuit 
	    Manufacturing Technology: A Framework & Appraisal
	[ ] Modeling the Performance of Cluster-Based Fabs
	[ ] Representing Probabilistic Knowledge in 
	    Relational Database
	[ ] Hypertext Interfaces for Decision-Support Systems:
	    A Case Study
	[ ] Knowledge-Directed Mediation Between Application Objects
	    and Base Data
	[ ] Outer Joins and Filters for Instantiating Objects from
	    Relational Databases Through Views
	[ ] Knowledge-Based Mapping of Relations into Objects
	[ ] Updating Relational Databases through Object-Based Views
	[ ] Management of Complex Structural Engineering Objects in
	    a Relational Framework
	                Slide Presentations
	[ ] A Real Time Control System for Semiconductor Equipment
	[ ] Knowledge Service, Library and Software Integration
	[ ] Structured User Interface Builder and Applying it to CIM
	[ ] SPIDER - Bridge to Lab Operations
	[ ] Dynamic Global Schema Integration: A Framework for 
	    Semiconductor Manufacturing Database Integration & Evolution
	[ ] Manufacturing Science: The Virtual Factory - The Stanford
	    Program in Semiconductor Manufacturing
	[ ] Semiconductor Manufacturing Research Program
	[ ] Properites of Si-Based Epitaxial Layers and Superlattices
	[ ] TI/AIR Force MMST Review: Overview of the Stanford Research
	    Program on Advanced Micro Factory
	[ ] On-Site Process Monitoring Techniques Using Acoustic Waves
	[ ] Semiconductor Manufacturing Researach - Background, Motivation,
	    and Overview
	[ ] Advanced Visulization Techniques for Seimconductor 
	    Device Simulation
	[ ] SPEEDIE Progress Report
********************************************************************************


Distribution:


TO:
DENNIS DICKERSON@DL STEVE DONOVAN@DLO   Tommy Gaut@HSO      Ed Hurry@DVO        
Louis Pau@VBE       jim rather@HSO      Pat Roach@VBE       Czarena Siebert@HSO 
Mike Sievers@HSO    Dale Stout@HSO      Susan Sugar@MWO     Sherry Williams@HSO 
Mike Willis@HSO     Tom Wilson@HST      

18.7dWD: Inside Info, 5/22/91 -- my apologies if this iULYSSE::ROACHTANSTAAFL !Tue Jun 04 1991 14:491424
 

                  I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Date:     28-May-1991 09:17pm CET
                                        From:     BEANE
                                                  BEANE@BIGRED@MRGATE@DPD04@DPD
                                        Dept:      
                                        Tel No:    

TO: See Below

Subject: FWD: Inside Info, 5/22/91 -- my apologies if this is a duplicate for some

   ISSUE NO. 189				MAY 22, 1991 
 
	*****************************************************************
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	*  PLEASE NOTE new ordering instructions, USE ABSTRACT NUMBER   *
	*  as well as normal information when ordering articles.	*
	*  You will note also a new format. Other improvements          *
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INSIDE INFORMATION is a biweekly current awareness service that contains 
abstracts of current journal articles indexed by subject.  This service is 
provided by Maynard Area Information Services.

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***************************************************************************
SUBJECTS IN THIS ISSUE INCLUDE: 

  APPLE COMPUTER	 INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY  PRODUCTIVITY   TECHNOLOGY
  COMPETITION		 INTERNATIONAL TRADE	 PROGRAMMING    WORKSTATIONS
  COMPUTER INDUSTRY	 MANAGEMENT		 SALES
  EDI			 MANUFACTURING	         SEMICONDUCTORS
  FACTORY AUTOMATION	 NETWORKS		 SOFTWARE
  FINANCE		 OPERATING SYSTEMS	 STORAGE DEVICES
  HUMAN RESOURCE MGMT.   PERIPHERALS		 SUPERCOMPUTERS
  INFORMATION SYSTEMS	 PERSONAL COMPUTERS	 SYSTEMS INTEGRATION

					DIGITAL INTERNAL USE ONLY

 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  APPLE COMPUTER, INC
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     What Do You Get With UNIX on a Mac?
 Author(s): Farrow, Rik
 Journal:   UNIXWorld
            v. 8, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 48-52
 Abstract:  389            JA
 Subjects:
            COMPUTER GRAPHICS
            OPERATING SYSTEMS

            "Apple Computer's newest version of UNIX, A/UX 2.0.1, boasts a
            full Macintosh environment that is almost indistinguishable
            from a Mac running its Multifinder graphical user interface
            (GUI).  Because you can run Multifinder under A/UX either as
            a UNIX process or a MacOS subprocess, you get about 3,600
            commercial applications at your disposal.  You're ready to get
            in line, right?  Maybe.  It depends on how you answer these
            questions: if you're a Mac user, you can connect your Mac to a
            UNIX system or network without resorting to A/UX -- so why spend
            more money for A/UX, plus bite the UNIX bullet?  If you're a
            UNIX user, and want a new workstation, why buy a Mac when you
            could opt for a faster RISC system?  Like all complicated things
            in life, the answers depend on circumstance."



 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  COMPETITION
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     The Organization of the '90s
 Author(s): Dichter, Steven F.
 Journal:   The McKinsey quarterly
            n. 1   1991   pp. 145-155
 Abstract:  412            JA
 Subjects:
            MANAGEMENT
            ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE

            "Organizations based on the 'Command and Control' principles of
            the 1910s are too costly, too slow to adapt, too unresponsive to
            customers, and too limited in creativity and initiative to
            respond effectively to the competitive challenges of the 1990s. 
            Many companies are beginning to experiment with a new set of
            organizational principles.  Few have yet made a complete
            transformation, but there is much to be learned from the efforts
            underway."



 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  COMPUTER INDUSTRY
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Challenges for the Computer Industry in the 1990s
 Author(s): Bohlin, Ron; Guiniven, Joanne
 Journal:   The McKinsey quarterly
            n. 1   1991   pp. 106-116
 Abstract:  411            JA
 Subjects:
            COMPETITION
            ECONOMICS
            STANDARDIZATION
            TECHNOLOGY

            "Continued technological developments, shifts in product and
            market demand, standardization, and intense competition are
            fundamentally changing the nature of the computer industry.  For
            most companies, the heady growth and relative profitability of
            the 1970s and early 1980s have been replaced by wrenching
            restructuring and the threat of further consolidation. 
            Competitive success in the new industry structure will stem from
            the ability to focus clearly on business priorities, develop
            skill-based advantages, and out-execute the competition.  This
            article examines strategic alternatives and their implications."
            (This article is adapted from The 1990s Report on the Computer
            Industry, published by McKinsey & Co., c1990)


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  EDI (ELECTRONIC DATA INTERCHANGE)
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Breaking Barriers to EDI
 Author(s): Emmett, Arielle
 Journal:   Datamation
            v. 37, n. 7   April 1, 1991   pp. 64-1 to 64-4
 Abstract:  380            JA
 Subjects:
            INFORMATION SYSTEMS MANAGEMENT
            INTERNATIONAL TRADE
            STANDARDS

            Information systems managers working for importers and
            exporters face a host of barriers when setting up international
            EDI applications.  Their common lament is that true
            international EDI -- that is, computer-to-computer exchange of
            structured business information across borders -- remains
            difficult, if not impossible to achieve.  For one thing,
            vendors are selling piecemeal EDI solutions that solve only part
            of an importer's problem.  And the global EDI community has not
            yet adopted a common computer syntax for formatting and sending
            EDI documents worldwide.  However, standards are beginning to
            evolve, and these barriers are slowly crumbling.


 Title:     GE Spreads EDI Gospel
 Author(s): McKusker, Tom
 Journal:   Datamation
            v. 37, n. 8   April 15, 1991   pp. 55-58
 Abstract:  385            JA
 Subjects:
            DATA INTERCHANGE
            INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
            NETWORKS

            The VAN (value-added network) providers so far have played a
            dominant role in ensuring the reliable delivery of EDI messages. 
            The computer-to-computer delivery of purchase orders,etc.
            between trading partners is a virtual Tower of Babel of
            incompatible cross-industry standards that have only recently 
            been simplified under the ANSI X.12 standards and, in turn, by 
            translation and communications software emanating from the
            value-added networks.  With some 15,000 large organizations now
            using EDI, the large corporate market has been penetrated. 
            What's left is to get these large companies' smaller trading
            partners to buy into EDI for well below the several thousand
            dollars they've been paying to date.  And VANs are also looking
            to increase the menu of services they're offering, including
            some relatively gourmet plans.  General Electric Information
            Services in Rockville, MD, by far the premier provider of EDI
            services, is working with these big companies to recruit the
            many small firms needed to make EDI practical.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  FACTORY AUTOMATION
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Open Systems: Gateway to a New Age
 Author(s): Sheridan, John H.; Teresko, John
 Journal:   Industry week
            v. 240, n. 8   April 15, 1991   pp. 25-56
 Abstract:  378            JA
 Subjects:
            CAD/CAM
            CUSTOMIZED SOFTWARE INTERFACES
            INTEGRATED BUSINESS SOLUTIONS
            OPEN SYSTEMS

            "It may be too early to write the obituary for proprietary
            computer systems.  But as more and more users come to appreciate
            the role that 'open' systems can play in creating a
            computer-integrated paradigm, the new computing paradigm will
            gather momentum.  And companies, which want the 'best of the
            best', will find it easier to match information-technology
            strategy to corporate strategy.  Open systems is the new
            computing paradigm that promises to liberate users from
            dependence on specific vendors' products -- and to remove
            obstacles."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  FINANCE
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Budget Growth Skids to 3.4%
 Author(s): Moad, Jeff
 Journal:   Datamation
            v. 37, n. 8   April 15, 1991   pp. 44-47
 Abstract:  384            JA
 Subjects:
            BUDGET SURVEYS
            INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY

            "Recession, continued decentralization and skepticism over
            information technology's payoff have slowed 1991 budget growth
            dramatically.  Citing ongoing economic uncertainty, continuing
            corporate decentralization and a rising tide of upper management
            skepticism over the real benefits of information technology
            investments, IS executives said their overall budgets will grow a
            paltry 3.4% in 1991 more than their 1990 levels.  Many IS
            leaders say this year's all-time low budget growth rate is a
            temporary condition, tied directly to uncertainty over the
            recession and the recent war in the Persian Gulf.  In fact, some
            say that, until late last year, they had been expecting budget
            increases at least as large as last year's (9.5%).  But sliding
            revenue and profit projections, particularly in industries such
            as air travel, financial services and some segments of
            manufacturing, have sent IS executives back to the budget drawing
            boards."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Managing the Diverse Work Force
 Author(s): Overman, Stephenie
 Journal:   HRMagazine
            v. 26, n. 4   April 1991   pp. 32-36
 Abstract:  403            JA
 Subjects:
            AFFIRMATIVE ACTION
            EEO
            PLURALISM
            WORK FORCE

            Managing diversity is a kind of contradiction within itself.  
            Managing diversity means communicating to employees that all
            people are valued whatever their differences -- cultural, racial
            or sexual preference.  If a business is to succeed, these
            individual and cultural threads must be woven into the corporate
            fabric.  The US has traditionally had a diverse work force, but
            with concerns about declining productivity and a shortage of
            skilled workers, employers are looking more closely at how to
            effectively manage that diversity. Whether diversity director is
            the wave of the future or a fad is open to debate. DEC's
            diversity program is mentioned, along with Travelers Corp.,
            Unisys, Honeywell, Corning, and ARCO.


 Title:     Ways to Make Diversity Programs Work
 Author(s): Leonard, Bill
 Journal:   HRMagazine
            v. 36, n. 4   April 1991   pp. 37-39,98
 Abstract:  408            JA
 Subjects:
            AFFIRMATIVE ACTION
            EEO
            MULTICULTURAL RELATIONS
            ORGANIZATIONAL TRAINING

            "As diversity awareness becomes a primary focus of
            organizational training, many companies are reevaluating their
            policies and programs.  In many cases, companies are looking to
            outside diversity specialists for help in evaluating what type
            of diversity training best fits their corporate culture.  In a
            recent interview with HRMagazine, diversity/management
            specialist Lewis Griggs discussed ways employers can address the
            management of multicultural diversity and the trends that will
            affect US businesses in the next decade."


 Title:     A '90s model for Performance Management
 Author(s): Greene, Robert J.
 Journal:   HRMagazine
            v. 36, n. 4   April 1991   pp. 62-65
 Abstract:  409            JA
 Subjects:
            COMPETITION
            PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
            WORK FORCE MOTIVATION

            "The only enduring competitive advantage is a high-quality,
            well-motivated work force willing to work together as a team to
            increase productivity.  All other resources can be bought in the
            marketplace -- by anyone. This is one of the principal
            challenges facing human resource practitioners in the '90s. 
            Given the scarcity of customers and the competition for these
            customers, organizations must, above all else, seek that source
            of competitive advantage that will enable them to survive. 
            Today's human resource function is critical to the performance
            of the organization.  It must take the lead in attracting,
            retaining, and motivating a high-quality work force.  The key
            issues are: how to determine what is needed at each level within
            an organization to produce organizational performance; how to
            measure and reward performance at each level; and how to
            re-focus individuals and units on satisfying customers rather
            than on pleasing those higher in the organizational hierarchy."


 Title:     Stemming the Exodus of Women Managers
 Author(s): Rosen, Benson; Miguel, Mabel; Peirce, Ellen; Univ. of No. Carolina
 Journal:   Human resource management
            v. 28, n. 4   Winter 1989   pp. 475-491
 Abstract:  429            JA
 Subjects:
            PROFESSIONAL WOMEN
            WOMEN MANAGERS
            WORKING WOMEN

            "Survey findings based on a national sample of CEOs and human
            resource managers indicate that over 50% of organizations have
            experienced moderate to great difficulty attracting and
            retaining women managers and professionals.  Respondents
            perceived that the most serious career problems encountered by
            women revolve around organizational politics, career development
            opportunities, and family conflicts.  Existing and needed human
            resource management policies in response to these problems are
            reported.  A series of additional analyses highlights
            differences across industries and according to company size and
            stage in the corporate life cycle.  Based on survey findings,
            recommendations are discussed for human resource management
            practitioners concerned with increasing their companies'
            abilities to actively for and retain women managers."


 Title:     Mentoring as an Antidote to Stress During Corporate Trauma
 Author(s): Kram, Kathy E.; Hall, Douglas T.; Columbia University; Boston Univ.
 Journal:   Human resource management
            v. 28, n. 4   Winter 1989   pp. 493-510
 Abstract:  430            JA
 Subjects:
            DOWNSIZING
            GLOBAL COMPETITION
            MENTORING
            ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE
            STRESS MANAGEMENT

            "This article examines mentoring as a potentially useful
            resource in an organization's adaptation to global competition
            and the need for improved learning capabilities.  [The authors]
            were surprised to find that mentoring relationships were
            perceived as more desirable under conditions of corporate
            stress, low job challenge, and low job involvement.  [They] were
            further surprised to find that individuals in early and later
            career stages were as likely, or more likely than, their
            midcareer colleagues to embrace the mentoring role.  Thus, it
            appears that mentoring may be more readily available as an
            antidote to stress than previously considered, and that it may
            be an important form of coping with the stressful, nonrewarding
            conditions that typically characterize corporate downsizing.  Not
            only is mentoring an important form of promoting development
            (for self and for others), but it also may represent a valuable
            vehicle for social support and learning during times of major
            corporate change."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  INFORMATION SYSTEMS
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     An EIS for the Desktop
 Author(s): Pinella, Paul
 Journal:   Datamation
            v. 37, n. 9   May 1, 1991   pp. 26-30
 Abstract:  396            JA
 Subjects:
            CORPORATE REPORTING STANDARDS
            EXECUTIVE SYSTEMS
            LOCAL AREA NETWORKS
            PERSONAL COMPUTERS
            WINDOWS

            Last September, Pilot Executive Software charted a new course
            for executive information software.  Lightship is one of the
            first tools for Microsoft Windows designed to build and run EIS
            applications on PCs and local area networks.  It is a relatively
            inexpensive PC tool for building EIS applications on LANs, and
            unlike most host-based EIS applications developed by programmers
            proficient in specialized languages, it is object-oriented. 
            Theoretically, it can be employed by any reasonably proficient
            Windows user to develop, modify and run applications that draw
            data from any workstation or server on a LAN.  Lightship could
            broaden EIS use to include thousands of middle-level managers
            and other employees who make critical business decisions every
            day.  By climbing aboard the Windows bandwagon first and pricing
            its product so aggressively, Pilot is in a position to lead the
            way toward making the transition to a new class of EIS, which it
            calls the "enterprise information system."  There is some risk
            in allowing EISs to proliferate in the hands of inexperienced
            users unaware of corporate data controls, yet many more IS users
            are intrigued by Lightship's potential to deliver EIS power to
            growing numbers of decision makers who rely heavily on
            spreadsheets, PC databases, and LANs.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Browsing Through Terabytes
 Author(s): Stein, Richard Marlon
 Journal:   Byte
            v. 16, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 157-164
 Abstract:  402            JA
 Subjects:
            INFORMATION RETRIEVAL
            INFORMATION SERVERS
            USER INTERFACES

            Wide-area information servers (WAIS), an engineering effort 
            spearheaded by Thinking Machines in Cambridge, MA,  are opening
            a new frontier in personal and corporate information services. 
            The goal of this research project is to enhance existing
            information services and provide a utilitarian mechanism for the
            industry.  WAISes provide the user-interface structure and
            underlying information retrieval protocol necessary to
            automatically collate, collect, and integrate diverse data
            streams.  WAISes can distill the content of vast archives into
            neatly manageable and browseable folders.  Online information
            services such as BIX and CompuServe attest to the need for this
            type of technology.  The next phase of information commerce will
            add WAIS capabilities to existing online services.  This will
            allow a user's workstation to act as librarian and information
            collection agent from a large number of sources.


 Title:     Groupware: Some Issues and Experiences
 Author(s): Ellis, Clarence A.; Gibbs, Simon J.; Rein, Gail L.; MCC
 Journal:   Communications of the ACM
            v. 34, n. 1   Jan. 1991   pp. 38-58
 Abstract:  413            JA
 Subjects:
            COMPUTER-SUPPORTED COOPERATIVE WORK (CSCW)
            ELECTRONIC WORKPLACE
            GROUP WORK
            MAN-MACHINE INTERACTIONS

            "Groupware reflects a change in emphasis from using the computer
            to solve problems to facilitate human interaction.  This article
            describes categories and examples of groupware and discusses
            some underlying research and development issues.  GROVE, a novel
            group editor, is explained in some detail as a salient groupware
            example."


 Title:     The Impact of Information Systems on Organizations and Markets
 Author(s): Gurbaxani, Vijay; Whang, Seungjin
 Journal:   Communications of the ACM
            v. 34, n. 1   Jan. 1991   pp. 59-73
 Abstract:  414            JA
 Subjects:
            INFORMATION SYSTEMS
            ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE

            "The adoption of information technology in organizations has
            been growing at a rapid rate.  The use of the technology has
            evolved from the automation of structured processes to systems
            that are truly revolutionary in that they introduce change into
            fundamental business procedures.  While the importance of the
            relationship between information technology and organizational
            change is evidenced by the considerable literature on the
            subject, there is a lack of comprehensive analysis of these
            issues from the economic perspective.  The aim of this article
            is to develop an economic understanding of how information
            systems affect some key measures of organization structure. 
            This article analyzes the roles of information systems, how they
            evolve and how they affect organizations and markets.  In
            particular, it analyzes the impact of IT on two important
            attributes of firms -- firm size and the allocation of
            decision-making authority among the various actors in a firm. 
            To this end, it starts with economic theories of organization as
            the foundation for its analysis."


 Title:     Beyond the Bells and Whistles
 Author(s): Yaplee, Darlene; Sun Microsystems Inc.
 Journal:   Personal workstation
            v. 3, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 39-47
 Abstract:  418            JA
 Subjects:
            DESKTOP COMPUTING
            MIXED-MEDIA COMPUTING
            MULTIMEDIA COMPUTING
            NETWORKED WORKSTATIONS
            SUN MICROSYSTEMS

            Multimedia, or mixed-media computing, is making computer industry
            headlines.  But what's being overlooked amidst all the noise is
            the true value of multimedia.  It's not just bells and whistles;
            what counts is its ability to support and enhance the way people
            work.  People want access to video, graphics, sound, images and
            even telephone calls from their desktop computers because they
            depend on these sources of information to do their jobs.  And
            they also want to be able to share multimedia information
            because collaboration among workers in dispersed locations is
            part of the way organizations get things done today.  Powerful
            mixed-media solutions running on Unix workstation networks do
            exist today and they demonstrate the real potential of
            multimedia technology: to help organizations expedite
            mission-critical tasks through people-to-people multimedia
            communications.  This article discusses how Sun is using
            multimedia to bring workgroup computing to new levels of
            productivity.


 Title:     Incredible Shrinking Computers
 Author(s): Bell, Trudy E.
 Journal:   IEEE spectrum
            v. 28, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 37-41
 Abstract:  425            JA
 Subjects:
            DESKTOP COMPUTERS
            LAPTOP COMPUTERS
            NOTEBOOK COMPUTERS
            PORTABLE COMPUTERS
            SYSTEMS

            "How did engineers maneuver that powerful computer into that
            tiny box?  Today's notebook computers pack motherboard, hard
            drive, modem, screen, keyboard, and long-lived batteries into a
            package weighing under 3.6 kg, with lighter successors on the
            horizon.  The secret was heroic engineering of compact
            components and power management software.  Plus, there were
            problems to overcome that desktop computers never see --
            including such exotica as rotary shock."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  INTERNATIONAL TRADE
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Little Dragons Breathing Fire
 Author(s): Poole, Gary Andrew; Kellner, Mark; Magnier, Mark
 Journal:   UNIXWorld
            v. suppl.   1991   pp. 39-44
 Abstract:  383            JA
 Subjects:
            SOUTHEAST ASIA
            UNIX

            The Southeast Asian countries of Hong Kong, Singapore, Taiwan,
            and Korea may play second fiddle to Japan, but their financial
            and technological influence still makes them significant
            players.  This report is focused on these so-called
            "second-tier"  countries (the first tier is Japan), because of
            their financial and technological influence in the region.  The
            authors call these countries "little dragons", but their buying
            power is anything but small.  


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  MANAGEMENT
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Men, Women & Leadership
 Author(s): Nelton, Sharon
 Journal:   Nation's business
            v. 79, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 16-22
 Abstract:  395            JA
 Subjects:
            FEMININE LEADERSHIP
            LEADERSHIP STYLES
            MANAGEMENT EFFECTIVENESS
            TRANSACTIONAL STYLE
            TRANSFORMATIONAL STYLE

            "The fortunate companies are those in which the differing
            leadership styles of men and women are complementary rather than
            confrontational.  Many women are adopting the best of
            traditional styles, such as a focus on performance, while more
            men are using "soft" approaches that work for women. This
            article deals with the special leadership traits that men and
            women bring to managerial positions and how forward-looking
            companies will allow both men and women to develop those
            abilities to the fullest.  Men and women managers can work
            comfortably together at the top and their differing styles of
            leadership can be complementary, producing a synergism that
            gives the company benefits it would not receive if two men or
            two women were in those jobs."


 Title:     Intelligent Buildings
 Author(s): Flax, Barry M.; AT&T
 Journal:   IEEE communications magazine
            v. 29, n. 4   April 1991   pp. 24-27
 Abstract:  417            JA
 Subjects:
            ARCHITECTURE
            CONNECTIVITY
            FACILITIES MANAGEMENT
            HUMAN FACTORS
            INFORMATION MANAGEMENT

            "An Intelligent Building is one that creates an environment that
            maximizes the efficiency of the occupants of the building while
            at the same time allowing effective management of resources with
            minimum life-time costs.  Intelligent Buildings make good
            business sense.  As the Information Age takes us to new heights,
            the Intelligent Building System (IBS) has the flexibility and
            modularity to accommodate every change.  An IBS is the
            integration of a wide range of services and systems into a
            unified whole.  In general terms the components are: energy
            management systems, temperature management systems, lighting
            control and reduction, access and area locate systems, security
            systems, fire life safety, telecommunications - including ISDN,
            office automation, computer systems, LANs, MISs, cabling schemes
            and records, maintenance systems, and expert systems.  This
            article examines each of these."


 Title:     Getting Along with the CEO
 Author(s): Pepper, Jon D
 Journal:   InformationWeek (Manhasset, N.Y.)
            n. 319   May 6, 1991   pp. 38-45
 Abstract:  421            JA
 Subjects:
            INFORMATION OFFICER
            INFORMATION SYSTEMS

            A recent study indicates that the average tenure of a CIO is
            only three years and that almost one-third of all corporate CIOs
            unwillingly depart from their posts.  The key reason is friction
            between the CIO and the man at the top.  Underlying that friction
            are two differing perspectives.  The CIOs tend to look inward,
            giving most of their attention to their companies' managers and
            employers, who they see as their clients.  CEOs, on the other
            hand, direct their vision outward into the marketplace, focusing
            on the suppliers and customers who do business with their firms. 
            Too often, these different visions lead to different
            expectations, resulting in times when the CEO's expectations of
            what IS should do don't mesh with those of the CIO -- one
            reason why the CIO is prone to serve as a scapegoat.  However,
            despite the CEO-CIO tensions, there are still plenty of chief
            executives more inclined to defend their information executives
            than to assail them.  Communication, maybe more than technical
            know-how, is crucial to CEO-CIO dealings.  Xerox, Unum Life
            Insurance, and Aetna are highlighted.


 Title:     Corning's Class Act
 Author(s): Hammonds, Keith H.
 Journal:   Business week
            n. 3213   May 13, 1991   pp. 68-76
 Abstract:  426            JA
 Subjects:
            COMMUNITY SUPPORT
            DIVERSITY
            MARKETING
            QUALITY

            "An old-line manufacturing company in a small upstate New York
            town is an unlikely place for innovation.  Yet thanks to the
            visionary leadership of CEO Jamie Houghton, Corning Inc. has
            become a laboratory for issues such as quality control,
            work-force diversity, and shared technology.  At the same time,
            it has become a global competitor, with leading shares in hot
            markets."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  MANUFACTURING
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Benchmarking World-Class Performance
 Author(s): Walleck, A. Steven; O'Halloran, J. David; Leader, Charles A.
 Journal:   The McKinsey quarterly
            n. 1   1991   pp. 3-24
 Abstract:  410            JA
 Subjects:
            BENCHMARKING
            COMPETITION
            PERFORMANCE EVALUATIONS

            "Competitive analysis is a powerful tool for strategy formulation
            because it quantifies competitive gaps in cost, quality, and
            timeliness.  But it usually does not provide a deep
            understanding of the processes and skills that create superior
            performance.  Benchmarking world-class performance within and
            across industries, however, not only quantifies performance
            gaps.  It also looks beyond discrete product evaluations to
            compare manufacturing and management processes.  Benchmarking
            establishes how much a company needs to improve to be at
            world-class levels of functional and cross-functional
            performance."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  NETWORKS
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Forecasting New Highs
 Author(s): Carr, Jim
 Journal:   LAN : the local area network magazine
            v. 6, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 36-44
 Abstract:  419            JA
 Subjects:
            ECONOMICS
            LANS
            SALES

            "The networking market is growing so fast that it has become the
            tail that wags the dog.  While PC sales have slowed, network
            sales continue to surge.  And, the continuing national economic
            recession notwithstanding, this growth appears destined to
            continue unabated, at least through 1995.  Just how fast and how
            far the network industry will grow remains open to conjecture.
            But conjecture, in the form of projections, estimates, and
            educated guesses, is what market research firms do.  The
            accuracy of these estimates remains open to question and the tide
            of world events.  Market research projections offer a valuable
            'what-if' look at the future.  These what-ifs...help coalesce
            an image of how the networking picture will change over the
            coming years, allowing you to evolve your networks, rather than
            being caught with obsolete technology."


 Title:     I Still Don't Know
 Author(s): Reddy, Shyamala
 Journal:   LAN : the local area network magazine
            v. 6, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 47-52
 Abstract:  420            JA
 Subjects:
            TELECOMMUNICATIONS
            WIDE AREA NETWORKS

            "For years now, both the telecommunications and networking
            industries have anticipated the advent of ISDN.  ISDN was going
            to revolutionize data and voice communications by providing
            transmission for both over the same digital link, paving the way
            for cheaper, easier-to-manage networks and creative new
            multimedia applications.  In reality, incompatible
            implementations, billing complexities, and a general lack of
            availability have slowed widespread acceptance of ISDN to the
            point where its window of opportunity may have just about closed
            once and for all. Will a recent standardization agreement
            salvage ISDN or has the technology of the future passed itself
            by?"


 Title:     LAN/WAN Protocol Analyzers: Network Management's Overnight
            Sensation -- 20 Years in the Making
 Author(s): King, Steven S.; Miller, Mark A.
 Journal:   Data communications
            v. 20, n. 6   May 1991   pp. 78-94
 Abstract:  422            JA
 Subjects:
            INTERNETWORKS
            LOCAL AREA NETWORKS
            NETWORK ANALYSIS
            NETWORK MANAGEMENT
            WIDE AREA NETWORKS

            "Throughout most of the 1970s and '80s, protocol analyzers were
            employed in networks largely dominated by slow terminal traffic
            and well-known protocols like X.25, IBM's SNA/SDLC, and DEC's
            DDCMP.  Today, though, those networks are evolving into LAN
            internetworks.  In the process, they're developing critical
            management deficiencies: Enter the analyzer.  As an essential
            tool for configuration, repair, and maintenance, protocol
            analyzers help network engineers evaluate data traffic on a
            wide variety of LAN and WAN links.  They do so by tracking
            packets, errors, and network utilization, as well as by decoding
            various protocols.  With the advent of multi-layered LANs and
            high-speed, packet-oriented, wide-area technologies like ISDN,
            the complexity has grown exponentially.  Further, as networks
            become more heterogeneous, users and their equipment
            increasingly fall outside the realm of single-vendor network
            management systems.  All this has created tremendous
            opportunities -- and difficulties for makers of protocol
            analyzers.  Fortunately for besieged LAN and WAN engineers, the
            latest generation of high-speed, intelligent protocol analyzers
            is rising to the occasion."



 Title:     Preparing for FDDI
 Author(s): Marsh, James
 Journal:   The DEC professional
            v. 10, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 38-49
 Abstract:  423            JA
 Subjects:
            COMMUNICATIONS
            DEC
            LANS
            OPEN SYSTEMS
            SYSTEMS
            TELECOMMUNICATIONS

            "The market for FDDI local-area networks is now firmly
            established.  There are definitive applications for the
            bandwidth afforded by this technology.  With a growing number
            of vendors making FDDI products available, businesses large and
            small are implementing this technology.  Such implementation
            involves more than simply putting a new class of data
            communication components in an existing network. The movement to
            FDDI entails a thorough assessment of network topology, data
            traffic matrices, and requirements for network flexibility and
            growth. For many large network environments, the implementation
            of FDDI is and will be a staged process, with several key
            activities necessary for bringing this data-link level
            technology into play.  This article addresses, in fundamental
            terms, the process involved, as well as some of the more
            important implications. Overall, the process is one of clearly
            defining the requirements for FDDI, planning a new cable plant
            or modifying an existing one, constructing the key elements,
            installing the specialized equipment and then running online
            production."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  OPERATING SYSTEMS
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     UNIX for a Once-Closed World
 Author(s): Nee, Eric
 Journal:   UNIXWorld
            v. suppl   1991   pp. 10-18
 Abstract:  382            JA
 Subjects:
            EUROPE
            INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
            UNIX

            "As Eastern Europe moves toward a free-market economy, UNIX
            vendors see this region as an emerging market, but the effects
            of Communist rule hold it back from open systems.  Demand for
            new computers in the region is high, but a lack of money,
            infrastructure, skilled people, and copyright protection,
            together with continuing Western restrictions on high-tech
            sales, continues to put a damper on the market.  UNIX vendors
            are not going to find it any easier to sell their systems in
            Central and Eastern Europe than they do in the West.  Computers
            compatible with proprietary DEC and IBM systems -- designed and
            manufactured in the East -- populate many sites.  MS-DOS PCs are
            very popular and are used in many situations where Western users
            would use minicomputers.  While interest in UNIX and open systems
            is growing, there is very little experience with it in most
            countries.  UNIX source code was on the list of restricted
            products until last year and sales of most Western workstations
            and minicomputers remain regulated by the Coordinating Committee
            for Multilateral Export Controls.  Opportunities for UNIX
            vendors do exist, however, because of the many new applications
            being installed."


 Title:     Toward a New Order
 Author(s): Smaalders, Bart
 Journal:   UNIX review : the magazine for systems and solutions developers
            v. 9, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 22-26
 Abstract:  390            JA
 Subjects:
            SYSTEM ADMINISTRATION
            UNIX

            "Traditional UNIX system administration techniques and tools are
            obstacles to the widespread use of UNIX.  Other factors forcing
            a focus on system administration are the general acceptance of
            the client-server model of distributed computing, the
            proliferation of inexpensive personal UNIX workstations, and the
            increasing size and complexity of the associated servers.  As a
            result, several standards organizations and most major UNIX
            companies have increased their efforts to develop new tools and
            standards to help manage the increasingly complex environments.
            This article explores the requirements for such tools and the
            emerging paradigms on which they may be based."



 Title:     POSIX for VMS
 Author(s): Naecker, Philip A.
 Journal:   The DEC professional
            v. 10, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 58-64
 Abstract:  424            JA
 Subjects:
            APPLICATIONS DEVELOPMENT
            OPEN SYSTEMS
            VMS

            "VMS Engineering has been working on integrating POSIX into VMS. 
            POSIX is in external field test, and early indications are that
            the field test is going well.  The goal of POSIX is to promote
            portability of application programs across open systems
            environments.  The standards seek to accomplish this by
            defining the interface between applications and operating
            systems.  The standards are achieving uncommon success among the
            many competing standards bodies and are being quickly and
            broadly accepted into all areas of computing.  The POSIX
            standards for the system interfaces and tools are based on
            UNIX, but they don't require UNIX as part of the specification."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  PERIPHERALS
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Helical Scan Recording: 8mm Evolves
 Author(s): Beavers, Kelly J
 Journal:   SunTech journal
            v. 3, n. 4   Sept/Oct 1990   pp. 40-48
 Abstract:  387            JA
 Subjects:
            DATA PROCESSING APPLICATIONS
            MAGNETIC TAPE
            STORAGE DEVICES

            "The term 'helical scan' has received considerable attention
            lately with regard to magnetic tape peripherals, primarily
            because both 8mm and 4mm digital audio tape (DAT) drives use
            helical scan recording techniques for data processing
            applications.  Whereas a stationary-head tape drive records data
            onto a limited number of tracks running parallel to the tape, a 
            helical scan device reads and writes from a high-speed rotating
            drum to a slow-moving tape.  These tracks can be densely packed,
            thus achieving very high data capacities and performance.  In
            spite of its great commercial success in audio/video, helical
            scan recording was initially ignored by the computer industry."
            Then in 1987, Exabyte Corp. introduced one of the first helical
            scan-based tape subsystems that could digitally record data for
            computer applications.  Other helical scan recording
            technologies have emerged including VHS and 4mm DAT.  Many
            proponents are poised to enter the DAT market, but the
            "technology has been stalled by industry controversy over which
            data format to use and whether sufficient numbers of DAT drives
            will be sold into the consumer market to gain manufacturing
            price economies-of-scale."


 Title:     Sharing On The Network
 Author(s): Schlesinger, Lee
 Journal:   Network computing
            v. 2, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 54-62
 Abstract:  399            JA
 Subjects:
            HARDWARE
            NETWORKS

            "Competition for scarce resources helps precipitate evolution." 
            In the network computing environment, such competition has led
            to the evolution of peripherals that can be shared efficiently
            by many users on the network. In the first days of desktop
            computing, every PC has its own peripherals -- its own disk
            storage, a dot matrix printer, and maybe a 1,200 bps modem. 
            Empowering users was a nice idea, but it brought an entire set
            of problems with it, namely -- how to administer dozens of
            independent machines.  Thus began the first real step toward
            recentralization of services on the network.  File servers were
            the first shared device.  Peripherals today are the hardware
            components not typically found on most users' desktop machines;
            at first, file servers were considered peripherals. This article
            discusses the sharing of peripherals, stating that the number
            one reason to consider sharing is cost.


 Title:     The LAN Peripheral Sharing Story
 Author(s): Bolles, Gary A
 Journal:   Network computing
            v. 2, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 64-70
 Abstract:  400            JA
 Subjects:
            NETWORKING
            NETWORKS

            In the beginning, all a LAN administrator had to worry about was
            a file server and a printer.  Now a LAN is composed of an almost
            bewildering array of shared devices, all of which need to be up
            and running all of the time.  When it all works, it's worth it. 
            Each of the devices mentioned above meets an important work
            requirement.  What's not clear is if your network needs all of
            these, which, of course, depends upon the needs of users on the
            LAN.  A peripheral-sharing solution must meet real user needs;
            LAN peripheral-sharing products need to reflect the kind of
            simplicity that a fax offers in order to gain user acceptance.
            LAN peripheral-sharing schemes must first represent some
            advantage -- to individuals and/or the organization -- over
            previous methods, and the capability must be easily integrated
            into the user's normal work methods.


 Title:     Halfway Measures
 Author(s): Haight, Timothy
 Journal:   Network computing
            v. 2, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 72-78
 Abstract:  401            JA
 Subjects:
            NETWORK MANAGEMENT
            NETWORKS

            "The concept of 'peripheral' is much like the concept of
            'center'.  Both are rather ambiguous terms. Given such a loose
            meaning, it in not surprising that information managers'
            experiences with peripherals vary widely.  When the definitional
            net is cast so wide as to include everything except network
            servers and printers, almost any experience will have taken
            place somewhere.  It is surprising , therefore, that a
            uniformity did emerge in this month's survey of more than a
            dozen network managers across the country.  Their attitudes
            toward network peripherals fell into two main categories,
            perhaps best described by whether they saw the glass of
            peripheral functionality as half empty or half full.  The
            managers interviewed have taken one of two courses: they have
            either delayed implementing newer technologies, such as fax
            servers and networked CD-ROM drives, because the technologies
            are not yet mature, or they have employed these peripherals, and
            others such as modem pooling devices, for part of their
            potential functionality.  Along the way, while taking these half
            measures, some information managers shared their techniques for
            both getting real use out of these peripherals -- and getting
            around some peripherals' galling limitations."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  PERSONAL COMPUTERS
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Does Compaq's Formula Still Compute?
 Author(s): Ivey, Mark
 Journal:   Business week
            n. 3213   May 13, 1991   pp. 100,104
 Abstract:  427            JA
 Subjects:
            COMPAQ COMPUTER CORPORATION
            IBM COMPATIBLES

            "More than mere clones, Compaq Computer Corp. PCs featured the
            latest technology and incorporated advances others didn't have. 
            They also carried higher prices and delivered fatter profits to
            Compaq and its dealers.  Compaq's machines gained a huge
            following in big corporations, and the nine-year-old company
            grew into one of the most successful startups ever.  Lately,
            though, CEO Joseph R. Canion's formula is showing signs of
            wear."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  PRODUCTIVITY
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Making Usable, Useful, Productivity-Enhancing Computer Application
 Author(s): Gould, John D.; Boies, Stephen J.; Lewis, Clayton; IBM Research; U
 Journal:   Communications of the ACM
            v. 34, n. 1   Jan. 1991   pp. 74-85
 Abstract:  415            JA
 Subjects:
            COMPUTER APPLICATIONS
            USABILITY DESIGN
            USER INTERACTIONS

            "This article is a status report about the value of the process
            of usability designs and, mainly, a description of new ideas for
            enhancing the use of the process.  The authors first note that,
            when followed, the process leads to usable, useful, likable
            computer systems and applications.  Nevertheless, experience and
            observational evidence show that the process is often not
            followed, despite designers' enthusiasm and motivation to do so. 
            To get around these organizational and technical obstacles, the
            authors propose a) a greater reliance on existing methodologies
            for establishing testable usability and productivity-enhancing
            goals; b) a new method for identifying and focusing attention on
            long-term trends abut the effects that computer applications
            have on end-user productivity; and c) a new approach, now under
            way, to application development, particularly the development of
            user interfaces."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  PROGRAMMING
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     A Dynamic C-Based Object-Oriented System for UNIX
 Author(s): Engelstad, Steve; Falck, Keith; et al; AT&T Bell Laboratories; Int
 Journal:   IEEE software
            v. 8, n. 3   May 1991   pp. 73-85
 Abstract:  393            JA
 Subjects:
            OBJECT-ORIENTED LANGUAGES

            "Calico is a new C-based object-oriented language supported by
            an integrated software-development environment.  [The authors]
            designed Calico to provide a rapid development environment for
            object-oriented systems that would leverage off of the Unix/C
            environment and provide strengths from several languages and
            systems, including Smalltalk, CLOS, C++, and Eiffel.  None of
            these languages directly addressed [their] needs, but each
            contributed ideas to be developed and used.  Calico introduces
            some unique language features, but its primary contribution is
            the productivity advantage that this feature integration
            provides to the Unix environment."



 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  SALES
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     A Conversation on Conversation with Deborah Tannen
 Author(s): Wiesendanger, Betsy
 Journal:   Sales & marketing management
            v. 143, n. 4   April 1991   pp. 38-42
 Abstract:  386            JA
 Subjects:
            COMMUNICATION STYLES
            SALES SUPPORT

            "Tannen, currently a professor of linguistics at Georgetown
            Univ., tells how understanding differences in conversational
            styles can go a long way toward helping people overcome what at
            first might seem an insurmountable barrier in their ability to
            communicate effectively.  In this exclusive interview, Tannen
            was asked about some of the many problems faced by salespeople
            and managers in their day-to-day communications with customers
            and colleagues."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  SEMICONDUCTORS
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Chipper Days for US Chipmakers
 Author(s): Schendler, Brenton R
 Journal:   Fortune
            v. 123, n. 9   May 6, 1991   pp. 90-96
 Abstract:  388            JA
 Subjects:
            CHIP DESIGN
            CHIP MANUFACTURING
            TECHNOLOGY

            "Once largely given up for dead, they are now capitalizing on
            their superior skills at innovative design.  Their
            semiconductors are selling fast -- and are nicely profitable. 
            No, not the Japanese. Last year it was US chipmakers that added
            to market share -- modestly, but in an almost flat year.  It was
            the first time that the US had gained on the Japanese in chips
            since 1979.  Even in Japan, which makes and uses nearly half the
            world's chips but has avoided foreign suppliers, the American
            market share inched up past 11% -- while the Japanese piece of
            the North  American market fell from 26% to 22%.  Though the
            world market for semiconductors expanded only slightly in 1990,
            many US companies showed impressive growth.  Leading the charge
            was Intel", whose revenues swelled 25% as they overtook Texas
            Instruments to become the second-largest US chipmaker.  No. 1
            Motorola's revenues grew 13%.  So far, chipmaking profits have
            nicely outpaced security analysts' expectations.  US chip
            companies have found they CAN compete -- as long as they pick
            their ground carefully.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  SOFTWARE
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     The Coming Showdown Over Software Patents
 Author(s): Schwartz, Evan I.
 Journal:   Business week
            n. 3213   May 13, 1991   pp. 104,106
 Abstract:  428            JA
 Subjects:
            PATENTS
            PROGRAMMING

            It used to be that a bunch of programmers could go into business
            by developing a software package that improved on an existing
            one.  The only caveat was that they not violate any copyrights
            -- i.e. don't copy the actual lines of computer commands from an
            earlier program.  It wasn't always easy, but many dozens
            succeeded.  Things aren't so simple now, because you can get
            patents on software.  And this stronger form of
            intellectual-property protection makes an enormous difference,
            as well as sending a chill through the industry.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  STORAGE DEVICES
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Backing Up Large Systems
 Author(s): Kolstad, Rob
 Journal:   UNIX review : the magazine for systems and solutions developers
            v. 9, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 29-32
 Abstract:  391            JA
 Subjects:
            BACKUP PROCEDURES
            DUMP PROGRAMS
            LARGE DISK SYSTEMS
            SECONDARY STORAGE

            "UNIX backup programs seem to suffer from a common set of
            problems, including the inability to work correctly with and
            sequence automatically through local and remote partitions. 
            Every site with significant secondary storage seems to invent a
            new way to sequence backups.  This article details an
            evolutionary step toward bringing backup into the era of large
            disk systems."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  SUPERCOMPUTERS
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Intel Woos Business Users
 Author(s): Davis, Dwight B
 Journal:   Datamation
            v. 37, n. 9   May 1, 1991   pp. 34-38
 Abstract:  397            JA
 Subjects:
            COMMERCIAL APPLICATIONS
            PARALLEL COMPUTERS
            PARALLEL MACHINES

            "It's a well-kept secret: many business problems are uniquely
            suited to the skills of massively parallel computers, says
            Intel.  But skeptical commercial users still balk at programming
            the mammoth machines."  As a vendor of parallel computers, Intel
            has been more successful than most.  Today, Intel has an
            installed base of more than 270 iPSC-family computers; iPSC/860s
            account for about 60 of the total.  As is the case with other
            leading parallel processor vendors, Intel has sold the vast
            majority of its supercomputers to educational institutions and
            research facilities.  Only a small number of commercial users
            are likely to port their applications to parallel supercomputers
            in the near future, unlike their brethren in science and
            academia.  Nevertheless, convinced that the commercial user is
            desirable, Intel is passionately courting MIS.  Its thrust into
            the commercial realm follows the broad acceptance of massively
            parallel designs by the leading-edge research community.  New
            compilers that ease the programming task and the examples of
            some intrepid users convinced academics that massive parallelism
            is legitimate.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  SYSTEMS INTEGRATION
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     25 Tough Integration Problems
 Author(s): Staff
 Journal:   Systems integration
            v. 24, n. 4   April 1991   pp. 35-51
 Abstract:  394            JA
 Subjects:
            PROBLEM SOLVING

            This is the second annual Tough Questions and Answers report. 
            Certain issues came up repeatedly, forming the basis of the
            editors' choices of exactly which 25 questions to look into. 
            The one fact that came through loud and clear was: Few problems
            can be solved simply by buying a product and installing it, like
            plumbing.  Building multivendor computer solutions isn't as
            simple as playing with Legos, despite what vendors may say. 
            Included are: CASE, communication servers, COS seal of approval,
            C2 security,  database downsizing, EISA vs. MCA, fault
            tolerance/security, FDDI, frame relay, graphical user interfaces,
            graphics standards, image processing, Macintosh integration,
            multimedia, network management, object-oriented databases,
            OS/2, PC-based UNIX, RAIDS vs. SLEDS, SMDs, tape storage, UPS,
            wireless LANs, and X.400/X.500.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  TECHNOLOGY
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     How Imaging Can Change Your Business
 Author(s): Tapellini, Donna
 Journal:   Datamation
            v. 37, n. 7   April 1, 1991   pp. 71-74
 Abstract:  381            JA
 Subjects:
            BUSINESS TRENDS
            IMAGING SYSTEMS
            MIS
            SOFTWARE TOOLS

            By now, it's a time-worn clich� to proclaim any one technology
            the "technology of the decade".  But it's fair to say that
            imaging is and will continue to be a technology of such
            importance that most major companies will evaluate it, create
            pilot projects or implement full production systems in the years
            to come. User demand is high, and so is interest on the part of
            senior management.  It is predicted that the current market for
            electronic-imaging products and services will explode from $1.2
            billion in 1989 to $12.2 billion in 1994.  Imaging costs can be
            extremely high, and the task of choosing the right equipment from
            the myriad of bundled systems, piecemeal software, scanners,
            jukeboxes, networked applications and utilities is fraught with
            difficulties.  Yet, companies experimenting with imaging are
            finding that it can provide surprising, even revolutionary,
            competitive advantages.  This is the first in a series on
            imaging technology, and it looks at some businesses that have
            used electronic imaging creatively to discover new products,
            services, and sources of revenue.


 Title:     Acquiring Technology from Outside
 Author(s): Cutler, W. Gale
 Journal:   Research technology management
            v. 34, n. 3   May-June 1991   pp. 11-18
 Abstract:  416            JA
 Subjects:
            EXTERNAL SOURCES
            FOREIGN TECHNOLOGY
            NEW PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT
            RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT

            "Managers of industrial research organizations must ensure that
            technological advances achieved in their laboratories
            materialize in the company's products and processes.  It is the
            author's personal observation that this challenge occupies so
            much of the attention of R&D managers that they fail to consider
            another major challenge - how to identify sources of technology
            external to the firm that are available, and how to go about
            acquiring and implementing technology from those sources.  This
            paper addresses the latter challenge."  Digital's External
            Research Program (ERP) is highlighted.  Their ERP makes
            cooperating universities "virtual laboratories" for DEC. 
            Through it, DEC "monitors major research developments and seeks
            to identify leading scientists who are performing research of
            interest to the company.  The ERP staff operates as a catalyst
            to help build lasting relationships between those researchers and
            Digital's research, engineering, applications development, and
            manufacturing groups."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  WORKSTATIONS
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     The 88000: Motorola's Future at RISC
 Author(s): Cook, Rick
 Journal:   Datamation
            v. 37, n. 7   April 1, 1991   pp. 37-4
 Abstract:  379            JA
 Subjects:
            MOTOROLA INC.
            MULTIPROCESSORS
            RISC

            "What do you get when you combine an innovative RISC
            architecture, a major microprocessor manufacturer and a strong
            software compatibility program?  In the case of the Motorola
            88000, you get an also-ran.  High priced and late to market, 
            Motorola's 88000 chip has not fared well in the RISC arena.  
            Currently, the 88000 is a distant third in the market, well
            behind SPATC from Sun Microsystems Inc. and the R2000 and R3000
            from Mips Computer Systems Inc. But a sound software strategy
            and a strong systems mentality may yet rescue the product."


 Title:     HP Speeds Up the Workstation Race
 Author(s): Curran, Lawrence
 Journal:   Electronics
            v. 64, n. 4   April 1991   pp. 43-48
 Abstract:  392            JA
 Subjects:
            APOLLO
            HEWLETT-PACKARD
            RISC

            "Sun Microsystems Inc. still leads the pack in the workstation
            race, but developments at Hewlett-Packard, Digital Equipment,
            and IBM have workstation watchers buzzing.  Digital and HP
            switched positions in the rankings last year, with DEC dropping
            from second to third place in workstation revenues.  And
            although still a distant forth, IBM zoomed ahead of Intergraph
            Corp. to round out the top five 1990 workstation vendors.  But
            right now, all eyes are on Hewlett-Packard Co., which made a big
            move late last month by introducing the reduced-instruction-set
            computing HP Apollo 9000 series 700 models.  These machines set
            a new price-performance standard for desktop workstations -- one
            that competitors will be shooting to eclipse in the ever changing
            race for performance leadership in the market.  The jockeying
            all adds up to more mips and megaflops per buck -- and probably
            better deals -- for corporate and engineering department managers
            who are shopping for desktop machines."


 Title:     Sun Compatibles: Who's Putting the Sizzle in SPARC?
 Author(s): Francis, Bob
 Journal:   Datamation
            v. 37, n. 9   May 1, 1991   pp. 43-46
 Abstract:  398            JA
 Subjects:
            RISC WORKSTATIONS
            SUN MICROSYSTEMS
            UNIX

            "Sun's SPARC system has been licensed to other vendors in an
            attempt to broaden the appeal of Sun's UNIX platform.  But, so
            far, few machines are actually shipping, and the competition's
            coming on strong." Solbourne Computer Inc. had the first
            Sun-compatible to hit the streets, but it has been joined by an
            army of manufacturers.  Seven new systems were introduced at
            fall's COMDEX show alone, although few systems are actually
            shipping.  It's too soon to say how well these various SPARC
            players will fare over the long run, but some IS managers
            already are putting SPARC-compatible machines to work.  Part of
            Solbourne's success appears to be based on its niche approach to
            the SPARC market -- it builds high-end SPARC servers and has
            carved out a favorable reputation among Sun's customer base --
            but it is open to question whether other clone companies can
            repeat this success.

Distribution:


TO:
DENNIS DICKERSON@DL STEVE DONOVAN@DLO   Tommy Gaut@HSO      Ed Hurry@DVO        
Louis Pau@VBE       jim rather@HSO      Pat Roach@VBE       Czarena Siebert@HSO 
Mike Sievers@HSO    Dale Stout@HSO      Susan Sugar@MWO     Sherry Williams@HSO 
Mike Willis@HSO     Tom Wilson@HST      

18.8FWD: JUNE/JULY WTDULYSSE::ROACHTANSTAAFL !Wed Jul 17 1991 10:52317
 

                  I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Date:     28-Jun-1991 06:08pm CET
                                        From:     BEANE
                                                  BEANE@BIGRED@MRGATE@DPD20@DPD
                                        Dept:      
                                        Tel No:    

TO: See Below

Subject: FWD: JUNE/JULY WTD


********************************************************************************
*****                  WESTERN TECHNOLOGY DIGEST                           *****
****                  VOLUME 4		 NUMBER 7			    ****
***                  JUNE/JULY             1991                              ***
**                   Mary Hayes 	 Editor                               **
********************************************************************************
 
WESTERN TECHNOLOGY DIGEST is a monthly technology transfer forum for 
communicating research, technical, and competitive information between 
Digital and research communities.
		
		********************************
 
THIS MAGAZINE IS RESTRICTED FOR INTERNAL USE ONLY BY EMPLOYEES OF DIGITAL 
EQUIPMENT CORPORATION.  @ Copyright Digital Equipment Corporation 1987, 1988,
1989, 1990, 1991.
*******************************************************************************
  
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********************************************************************************
			TABLE OF CONTENTS
			THIS ISSUE = 

I.	Corporations, Culture, and Commitment: Motivation and 
	Social Control in Organizations - Charles O'Reilly

II.	The Best and Brightest Speak Out - Barbara Berkman

III.	Invisable Men and Women: A Status Report on Race as a Variable
	In Organization Behavior Research - Taylor Cox & Stella Nkomo

IV.	Deconstructing Organizational Taboos: The Suppression of Gender
	Conflict in Organizations - Joanne Martin

V.	Approximation Schemes for Covering and Packing Problems in
	Image Processing and VLSI - Dorit Hochbaum & Wolfgang Maass

	The Linzertorte Problem, or a Unified Approach to Painting, 
	Baking and Weaving - Dorit Hochbaum & Edna Wigderson

	A Unified Approach to Approximation Algorithms for Bottleneck
	Problems - Dorit Hochbaum & David Shmoys

	Fast Approximation Algorithms for a Nonconvex Covering Problem
	- Dorit Hochbaum & Wolfgang Maass

	Optimal Algorithms for the Allocation Problem and 
	its Extensions - Dorit Hochbaum

VI.	Re-Evaluation Mode Timing Simulation - Marko Chew & Andrzej Strojwas

VII.	Automated Paper Request Form

*******************************************************************************
             Corporations, Culture, and Commitment: Motivation and
                       Social Control in Organizations

     			      Charles O'Reilly
     			       U.C. Berkeley
     			Graduate School of Business

     The material presented here offers one perspective on corporate 
culture. It emphasizes how, from a managerial perspective, culture may 
be understood in terms of the norms shared by members of the 
organization. When these expectations are widely shared and strongly 
held, they may powerfully shape behavior, and in turn, be of great 
help or harm to the individual or the organization. Management needs 
to be sensitive to what the central organizational norms are and how 
it can affect them. To fail to understand these issues is to ignore 
the advice of a CEO who said, "We will either be a victim or a 
successful result of our culture."
*******************************************************************************
     		  The Best and Brightest Speak Out

     		        Barbara Berkman
     		      Electronic Business

     Innovation. Protectionism. Global competitiveness. 
Manufacturing's future. If these are the most pressing issues facing 
U.S. electronics and computer companies today, then their weight lies 
squarely on the talent of tomorrow - the Class of 1989, the graduate 
engineers and MBAs on whom the industrial future rests. What follows 
is a first glimpse of that future. Electronic Business tapped a 
sampling of the best and brightest school students at the country's 
top institutions. Thus armed, they ran a series of focus groups with 
two goals in mind: to learn the expectations of the business and 
technology leaders of the future, and to channel their solutions to 
the leaders of today.
     In their view, the corporation of today is for the most part 
marked by instability, not opportunity. A workplace made unstable by 
corporate restructurings or foreign competition has taught the Class 
of 1989 to seek - now more then ever - jobs that are challenging and 
broad-based. It is the way they have chosen to adapt, managing their 
careers so that they are less vulnerable. Their idea of job security 
isn't a position that is guaranteed for life, but a job that lasts 
maybe three to five years and prepares them for a broad range of 
responsibilities in future positions. In answer, companies need to 
rethink the compensation, benefits, recognition, and impact on the 
corporation they offer. Tomorrow's job-hopping leaders want mobility 
from project to project; better mentor programs; technical ladders for 
engineers; and above all, a shift toward pay for performance. The 
implication for corporations is that the importance of retirement and 
other benefits to a highly skilled workforce is on the wane.
*******************************************************************************
     	Invisible Men and Women: A Status Report On Race as a 
             Variable in Organization Behavior Research

     		   Taylor Cox, Jr. & Stella M. Nkomo
             University of Michigan/University of North Carolina

     Twenty-five years after passage of the Civil Rights Act, the full 
integration of racial minorities in the United States workforce has 
still not been achieved. Recent demographic trends indicating that the 
workforce will be increasingly composed of racial minorities make this 
a critical issue for academics and practitioners alike. This paper 
reports on a review of journal research addressing issues of race in 
organizations. Articles published in twenty major outlets for 
organization behavior research between 1964 and 1989 were reviewed. 
Data on the quantity, types and topics of published work are 
presented. Results indicate that the amount of total published 
research is small relative to the importance of the topic, and the 
recent trend is for less rather than more research. And that the 
designs and research questions have been very narrow, and that the 
topics covered are not representative of the domain or organization 
behavior. Based upon the findings, some suggestions for future 
research are offered.
*******************************************************************************
     		Deconstructing Organizational Taboos: The
             Suppression of Gender Conflict in Organizations

     			   Joanne Martin
                      Graduate School of Business
                         Stanford University

     This paper begins with a story told by a corporation president to 
illustrate what his organization was doing to "help" women employees 
balance the demands of work and home. The paper deconstructs and 
reconstructs this story text from a feminist perspective, examining 
what it says, what it does not say, and what it might have said. This 
analysis reveals how organizational efforts to "help women" have 
suppressed gender conflict and reified false dichotomies between 
public and private realms of endeavor, suggesting why it has proven so 
difficult to eradicate gender discrimination in organizations. 
Implications of feminist perspective for organizational theory are 
discussed.
*******************************************************************************
     	       A Unified Approach to Approximation Algorithms
                         for Bottleneck Problems

     		     Dorit Hochbaum & David Shmoys
                           U.C. Berkeley

     This paper investigates an extremely simple, powerful technique 
for devising approximation algorithms for a wide variety of 
NP-complete problems in routing, location, and communication network 
design. Each of the polynomial-time algorithms presented here delivers 
an approximate solution guaranteed to be within a constant factor 0 of 
the optimal solution; such a polynomial-time algorithm is called a 
0-approximation algorithm. 

 The Linzertorte Problem, Or A Unified Approach To Painting, Baking and Weaving

     		    Dorit Hochbaum & Edna Wigderson
     			   U.C. Berkeley

     This paper studies primarily the complexity of properly painting 
2-colorable graphs. Their aim is to achieve a most efficient procedure 
that will produce such a coloring. In order to do this, they first 
must introduce measures of efficiency for painting algorithms. They 
describe a general complexity model - the path model that is 
applicable to all 2-colorable graphs. Then for the class of grid 
graphs they restrict the general model to three specific models - the 
vertex model, the line model and the parallel model.

     	     Approximation Schemes for Covering and Packing
                 Problems in Image Processing and VLSI

     		    Dorit Hochbaum & Wolfgang Maass
             U.C. Berkeley/University of Illinois at Chicago
                    
     Polynomial approximation schemes are described in this paper for 
several strongly NP-complete problems that have important applications 
in the areas of robot motion planning, VLSI design, image processing, 
and location. These problems appear in the contexts of covering and 
packing convex objects. One of them is the square packing problem, 
which comes up in the attempt to increase yield in VLSI chip 
manufacture. For exsample, 64K RAM chips, some of which may be 
defective, are available on a rectilinear grid placed on a silicon 
wafer. 2 times 2 arrays of such nondefective chips could be wired 
together to produce 256K RAM chips. In order to maximize yield, they 
want to maximal number of such 2 times 2 arrays into the array of 
working chips on a wafer.

    Fast Approximation Algorithms for a Nonconvex Covering Problem


     		   Dorit Hochbaum & Wolfgang Maass
                 U.C. Berkeley/ University of Illinois

     This paper studies approximation algorithms for some covering 
problems that arise in motion planning for robots. These covering 
problems are of particular mathematical interest since they typically 
require covering points by a minimal number of objects that are 
nonconvex. The corresponding problems of covering with convex objects 
are usually easier to analyze. For instance, they were able to derive 
polynomial approximation schemes for numerous convex covering and 
packing problems. When they employ the same technique in the nonconvex 
case, the scheme derived is exponential in a nonconvexity parameter.

    Optimal Algorithms for the Allocation Problem and its Extensions

     			  Dorit Hochbaum
     	   School of Business Administration and IEOR Dept.
                          U.C. Berkeley

     They present a proof of the impossibility of strongly polynomial 
algorithms for the allocation problem, in the comparison model and in 
the algebraic tree computation model, (except when the objective is 
quadratic). The lower bound proof is for the allocation problem. 
Consequently, there are no strongly polynomial algorithms for 
nonlinear (concave) separable optimization over a totally unimodular 
constraint matrix. This is in contrast to the case when the objective 
is linear.
     The allocation problem and its extensions are all solvable using 
a greedy algorithm which is exponential. They present scaling-based 
algorithms that use the greedy as a subroutine. The algorithms are 
polynomial for all these problems and are also optimal in that the 
complexity meets the lower bound derived from the comparison model.
************************************************************************
     		Re-Evaluation Mode Timing Simulation

     		   Marko Chew & Andrzej Strojwas
     	     Dept. of Electrical and Computer Engineering
     		    Carnegie Mellon University

     Due to manufacturing variations, the propagation of signals 
through a given path in a circuit is characterized by a statistical 
distribution. The Monte Carlo method which is a technique to estimate 
the statistical nature of the signal propagation requires the 
execution of multiple simulation runs of the same input pattern with 
different process conditions. We have developed a technique called 
re-evaluation mode simulation which can handle a wider range of 
process conditions since logic behavior is considered. Techniques for 
inexpensively evaluating the effects of different process conditions 
on circuit path delays have not considered the logic behavior. 
Consequently, the range of process conditions accommodated by these 
techniques is unnecessarily limited.
*******************************************************************************
VII.		   Automated Paper Request Form

     Below are the papers that are available from the June/July 1991 issue
of WTD. Please send all requests to REESA::HAYES. Please include your 
MailStop and the automated paper form. Do Not send back the entire WTD
with your request at the bottom; also if you are ordering papers from
past issues, you must add issue, title and author of paper. Thanks.

	[ ] Corporations, Culture, and Commitment: Motivation and
	    Social Control in Organizations
	[ ] The Best and Brightest Speak Out
	[ ] Invisible Men and Women: A Status Report on Race as a
	    variable in Organization Behavior Research
	[ ] Deconstructing Organizational Taboos: The Suppression of
	    Gender Conflict in Organizations
	[ ] Approximation Schemes for Covering and Packing Problems
	    in Image Processing and VLSI
	[ ] The Linzertorte Problem, or a Unified Approach to Painting
	    Baking and Weaving
	[ ] A Unified Approach to Approximation Algorithms for 
	    Bottleneck Problems
	[ ] Fast Approximation Algorithms for a Nonconvex Covering Problem
	[ ] Optimal Algorithms for the Allocation Problem and
	    its Extensions
	[ ] Re-Evaluation Mode Timing Simulation
********************************************************************************


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Mike Willis@HSO     Tom Wilson@HST      

18.9FWD: Inside Info., 10 July 1991ULYSSE::ROACHTANSTAAFL !Wed Jul 17 1991 12:101362
 

                  I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Date:     15-Jul-1991 05:40pm CET
                                        From:     BEANE
                                                  BEANE@BIGRED@MRGATE@DPD05@DPD
                                        Dept:      
                                        Tel No:    

TO: See Below

Subject: FWD: Inside Info., 10 July 1991

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***************************

   ISSUE NO. 192				JULY 10, 1991
 
	*****************************************************************
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***************************************************************************
SUBJECTS IN THIS ISSUE INCLUDE: 

APPLE COMPUTER INC.   EDI		      MULTIPROCESSING    SYSTEMS
CIM		      HUMAN RESOURCE MGMT.    NETWORKS           TECHNOLOGY
COMMUNICATIONS	      INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY  NEW PRODUCT DEV.   TELECOMM.
COMPETITION	      INNOVATIONS	      PACKAGING
COMPUTER ARCHITECTURE INTERNATIONAL TRADE     PERSONAL COMPUTERS	   
COMPUTER INDUSTRY     MANAGEMENT	      RISC  
CUSTOMER SERVICE      MIS		      SOFTWARE
DEC		      MANUFACTURING	      STORAGE DEVICES


		DIGITAL INTERNAL USE ONLY



 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  APPLE COMPUTER, INC
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     An Alliance Made in PC Heaven
 Author(s): Armstrong, Larry
 Journal:   Business week
            n. 3219   June 29, 1991   pp. 40-42
 Abstract:  515            JA
 Subjects:
            COMPUTER INDUSTRY
            IBM
            MOTOROLA
            PERSONAL COMPUTERS

            "In a jaw-dropping move intended to get it into the computer biz
            mainstream, Apple has forged a preliminary agreement for a
            technology partnership with none other than Big Brother. 
            Insiders say Apple and IBM executives developed an agreement in
            principle on June 10 near IBM's headquarters.  The deal would
            give Apple the right to use an important IBM microprocessor, say
            Apple insiders and sources close to IBM.  In exchange, IBM is
            negotiating to put its hands on Apple's crown jewel -- its
            proprietary software.  By 1993, the venture could result in Apple
            and IBM workstations that could be easily linked -- and even
            share applications software."  There is no disputing how
            stunning a change in strategy this represents for Apple, and this
            alliance could sharply alter the personal computer world's
            balance of power.  It's a major step forward for Apple's
            longtime partner, Motorola Inc, who sold chips to Apple: they
            will now make IBM's RISC chip for Apple, and be a second supplier
            for IBM.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  CIM (COMPUTER INTEGRATED MANUFACTURING)
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Communications Planning in CIM
 Author(s): Umar, Amjad; Univ. of Michigan, Dearborn
 Journal:   Journal of data & computer communications
            v. 4, n. 1   Summer 1991   pp. 63-77
 Abstract:  549            JA
 Subjects:
            COMMUNICATIONS
            INTERCONNECTIVITY
            MANUFACTURING

            "Careful planning of computer communications platforms is
            essential to support computer-integrated manufacturing (CIM) and
            computer-integrated environments (CIEs).  This article offers a
            procedure for such planning that includes the various levels of
            computing devices, system software, and networks, with particular
            emphasis on interconnectivity and decoupling requirements.  A
            framework for categorizing CIM/CIE interconnectivity is also
            included."



 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  COMMUNICATIONS
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Message Passing Holds the Key to Distributed Computing
 Author(s): Tait, Peter; PeerLogic, Inc.
 Journal:   Computer technology review
            v. 11, n. 6   May 1991   pp. 23-27
 Abstract:  509            JA
 Subjects:
            CLIENT-SERVER APPLICATIONS
            DISTRIBUTED PROCESSING
            MESSAGE PASSING

            Although not yet as popular as client-server, the peer-to-peer
            model may be the real future of distributed computing.  This
            model assumes that a distributed application consists of a
            number of distinct processes running on one or more computers on
            the network, with communication between these processes
            depending entirely on the dynamic needs of the application.  The
            model assumes that communication between the processes can be
            initiated by either partner in the conversation. It is obvious
            that this architecture offers all the same advantages as the
            client-server model, with the addition of greater flexibility. 
            This flexibility may well prove crucial to the development of
            mission-critical business applications.  The peer-to-peer model
            is best served by utilizing message passing as the
            communications architecture, since any other communications
            scheme will tend to restrict the generalized nature of the
            model.  Message passing offers more efficient use of distributed
            resources than RPC (remote procedure call) technology.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  COMPETITION
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Designing Effective Organizations
 Author(s): Parnaby, J.
 Journal:   International journal of technology management
            v. 6, n. 1/2   1991   pp. 15-32
 Abstract:  538            JA
 Subjects:
            DEVELOPMENT
            ENGINEERING
            ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE
            SYSTEMS APPROACH
            TEAMWORK
            TOTAL QUALITY

            "The competitiveness of an engineering company in today's
            marketplace depends as much on its organizational structure and
            style as on its technical capability.  Indeed, the latter flows
            from the former.  The modern organization must be lean,
            responsive, flexible and make maximum effective use of its
            engineers.  Many heads of technical functions have experience
            only of traditional functional organizational effectiveness in
            terms of speed of response, reduced lead times, and total
            quality performance.  Often organizational change in response to
            competitive pressures is done in an unsystematic and ad hoc way,
            with consequentially poor results.  Whilst an organization
            cannot be designed with decimal point precision, studies of
            organizational innovation and system engineering show that a
            set of methodologies exists to help a top management team to
            improve the organizational structure of their company in a
            positive, step-by-step and systematic way.  Such an approach is
            an integral part of a Total Quality program aimed at achieving
            high quality of performance of every part of the organization."


 Title:     Why Japan Keeps on Winning
 Author(s): Rapoport, Carla
 Journal:   Fortune
            v. 124, n. 2   July 15, 1991   pp. 76-85
 Abstract:  554            JA
 Subjects:
            BUSINESS ALLIANCES
            INDUSTRY ALLIANCES
            JAPAN

            Almost all of Japan's familiar blue-chip companies belong to
            some kind of keiretsu, or business alliance.  Among them are
            Mitsubishi, Sumimoto, and Misui.  These keiretsu are critical to
            the country's special brand of capitalism, the reason Japan
            keeps dominating world markets.  What makes the difference is a
            system that pulls together government, industry, capital, and
            the best information on high technology worldwise to create a
            machine that grinds competitors into powder.  Along with cars
            and consumer electronics, the Japanese are exporting their way
            of doing things.  Of all the American high-tech companies that
            have changed hands in recent years, more than two-thirds were
            bought by the Japanese.  Combined with the keiretsu, these are
            the significant elements of the Japanese system: antitrust --
            the Japanese don't really believe in it; targeting -- without it,
            Japan might not be in computers or semiconductors today;
            Kabutocho -- Japan's Wall Street, where hostile takeovers and
            leveraged buyouts don't exist, and big shareholders never sell,
            but hang in there for business reasons and capital gains.  The
            whole systems sounds unfair, but it makes sense to the Japanese. 
            Far from seeing a need to reform, most Japanese businessmen
            think that Americans should act like them.  For various reasons,
            Westerners cannot and should not try to emulate the Japanese
            system, but they could profit by adopting some of it, and at
            least should learn more about how Japan _really_ works.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  COMPUTER ARCHITECTURE
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Real-time Computing with IEEE Futurebus+
 Author(s): Sha, Lui; Rajkumar, R.; Lehoczky, John P.
 Journal:   IEEE micro
            v. 11, n. 3   June 1991   pp. 30-33,95-100
 Abstract:  520            JA
 Subjects:
            BUSES
            OPEN STANDARDS
            REAL-TIME COMPUTING
            STANDARDS

            "The proposed IEEE Futurebus+ standard specifies a scalable
            backplane bus architecture that can be configured in widths of
            32, 64, 128, or 256 bits.  Government and industry backing
            promises to make the standard a popular candidate for
            high-performance and embedded real-time systems of the 1990s. 
            This article reviews the design and application considerations
            for real-time computing using Futurebus+." 


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  COMPUTER INDUSTRY
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     And the Winners Are...
 Author(s): Curran, Lawrence
 Journal:   Electronics
            v. 64, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 27-32
 Abstract:  510            JA
 Subjects:
            APPLICATIONS
            MICROPROCESSORS
            OPERATING SYSTEMS
            RISC

            "Who will be the winners and losers in the Advanced Computing
            Environment?  Though the first platforms implementing the new
            industry initiative won't be widely available until next year,
            computer industry analysts are already putting together a
            scorecard in the aftermath of the consortium's announcement of
            its specifications and market directions.  The group's
            promulgations of an Advanced RISC Computing (ARC) spec for the
            MIPS Computer Systems Inc. microprocessor family represents a
            potentially formidable challenge to the de facto RISC chip
            standards -- the Intel Corp. i860/i960 and Sun Sparc
            architectures.  For electronics and computer industry executives
            pondering major purchases of personal computers or workstations,
            the ACE consortium means keener competition among the three
            camps and more favorable prices from all vendors.  The 21-member
            consortium is an international who's who of computer and
            software companies.  Among them, besides MIPS, are Compaq
            Computer, DEC, NEC, Microsoft, the Santa Cruz Operation, and
            Sony.  Importantly, however, neither Hewlett-Packard nor IBM
            belongs; each has elected to go with a proprietary RISC
            architecture."


 Title:     How Fujitsu Will Tackle the Giants
 Author(s): Schendler, Brenton R.
 Journal:   Fortune
            v. 124, n. 1   July 1, 1991   pp. 78-82
 Abstract:  529            JA
 Subjects:
            COMPETITION
            JAPAN
            MARKETING

            Even with $21 billion in total revenues last year, Fujitsu
            weighs in at only about one-third the heft of industry leader
            IBM.  It hasn't shown much of a flair for making its name known
            outside of Japan.  It has yet to become a major factor in the
            booming PC business.  It has sold only a few dozen big mainframe
            systems and supercomputers in America, mainly to outposts of
            Japanese banks and industrial companies?  So how does Fujitsu
            manage to rank No. 2 in the world's computer industry? 
            Fujitsu's substantial stakes in Amdahl Corp. and International
            Computers Ltd. contributed nearly half its $5.2 billion of
            overseas revenue last year.  They are what makes Fujitsu stand
            far above rivals NEC, Hitachi, and Toshiba as a global computer
            powerhouse.  Amdahl and ICL are the big guns in Fujitsu's plan
            to go global by going local.  Fujitsu is internationalizing by
            proxy: these two companies  are run by Westerners who are free to
            chart their own courses and even compete against one another. 
            And its working so well that Fujitsu is looking for more such
            deals.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  CUSTOMER SERVICE
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Does Your Company Pass or Fail Service?
 Author(s): Damian, Jacqueline; et al
 Journal:   Electronics
            v. 64, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 48-56
 Abstract:  511            JA
 Subjects:
            ELECTRONICS
            MARKETING
            QUALITY

            "Hot technology isn't enough. Time to market won't do it,
            either, and neither will superb quality. All of those 
            attributes, rightly cherished by suppliers of electronics
            products,  won't launch a company into the big leagues in terms
            of gaining market share without the addition of one crucial, if
            elusive, ingredient to the recipe: customer service.  In the
            fevered marketplace of the 1990s, customer satisfaction has
            become a major selling point among vendors jousting for client
            dollars.  And high quality, once the industry's holy grail, has
            become a given, something the customer expects without question. 
            What's left is service, a multifarious construct of tangible and
            intangible considerations that can make a vendor stand out from
            the crowd of competitors -- and keep his order book full."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  DIGITAL EQUIPMENT CORPORATION
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     'Open Systems' May Be DEC's 'Open Sesame'
 Author(s): McWilliams, Gary
 Journal:   Business week
            n. 3214   June 24, 1991   pp. 101-103
 Abstract:  514            JA
 Subjects:
            IBM
            INFORMATION PROCESSING
            MARKETING
            OPEN SYSTEMS
            SALES STRATEGIES

            "For three years now, Digital Equipment Corp has been trying
            to break out of a withering sales and profit slump.  The
            minicomputer giant seems to have tried everything -- revamping
            its VAX minicomputers, adding new families of workstations, even
            taking on IBM in mainframes.  It has reshuffled its organization
            several times, cut 9,000 jobs and launched dozens of new sales
            and service programs.  Still, revenues for FY91 are only
            expected to inch up 5%" from last year, and analysts figure it will 
            cost DEC $300 million to eliminate an additional 8,000 jobs.
            Both IBM and DEC are facing what looks like permanent declines
            in sales of their high-proprietary systems.  But DEC has a new
            plan: by pushing software and services geared toward tying all
            kinds of computers together, no matter what the brands, it hopes
            to win new customers and make up for the VAX sales slowdown.  To
            win influence in "open systems" network computing, DEC is
            liberally sharing some of its best software with standards
            organizations and even with its rivals, including IBM.  The new
            DEC won't emerge overnight, but it is on the right track.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  EDI (ELECTRONIC DATA INTERCHANGE)
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     EDI: Making It Finally Happen
 Author(s): Barber, Norman F.
 Journal:   Production & inventory management review & APICS news
            v. 11, n. 6   June 1991   pp. 35-40,49
 Abstract:  521            JA
 Subjects:
            COMMUNICATIONS
            DATA INTERCHANGE
            MANUFACTURING

            EDI, electronic data interchange, has been promoted as the
            technology that will fundamentally change business processes and
            relationships between manufacturers and their trading partners --
            their customers and suppliers.  The reality is that, while the
            number of companies using EDI continues to increase, the vast
            majority of these companies exchange the data from only one or
            two documents and usually do so with a small set of trading
            partners.  To date, only a few companies can say they have made
            EDI really pay off.  Despite these current realities, EDI
            will continue to become a competitive necessity for manufacturers
            in the '90s and beyond.  The continued expansion of EDI will
            occur because manufacturers simply can no longer accept
            antiquated communications and operating philosophies that exist
            between companies when EDI and JIT programs are expanding
            internally.


 Title:     EDI - A Strategic Weapon in International Trade
 Author(s): Janssens, Gerrit K.; Cuyvers, Ludo
 Journal:   Long range planning
            v. 24, n. 2   April 1991   pp. 46-53
 Abstract:  525            JA
 Subjects:
            COMMUNICATIONS
            EUROPE
            INTERNATIONAL TRADE
            TELECOMMUNICATIONS

            "While electronic data interchange will in the long term be a
            necessity for industry, there are problems to be solved before
            it is generally accepted.  Close cooperation between European
            standard committees and the European community is recommended if
            European industry as a whole is not to fall behind in the
            development.  In a future competitive Europe a mistake on the
            possibilities of telecommunications can be fatal."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Identifying the Employee of the Future
 Author(s): Mirabile, Richard J.
 Journal:   The Journal of business strategy
            v. 12, n. 3   May/June 1991   pp. 32-36
 Abstract:  522            JA
 Subjects:
            ORGANIZATIONAL STRUCTURE
            STRATEGIC PLANNING

            "Organizations today are increasingly losing control over
            external forces and conditions that directly or indirectly
            affect their continuity as viable competitors.  Given the
            inability to change or even predict such forces in the world,
            organizations must increasingly operate within some reasonable
            set of expectations or projections.  In this context of
            uncertain futures, the question for many organizations becomes:
            How do organizations identify the criteria for future success
            and the people to assume future responsibilities?  In short, the
            predicament of human resources in this scenario is how to
            identify the employee of the future.  Hewlett-Packard evaluated
            its future marketing needs and compared it to the capabilities
            of current employees.  This case study is an example of how
            other companies can ensure they have the best people to meet
            their strategic goals."


 Title:     Race in the Workplace: Is Affirmative Action Working?
 Author(s): Gleckman, Howard; et al
 Journal:   Business week
            n. 3221   July 8, 1991   pp. 50-63
 Abstract:  555            JA
 Subjects:
            EEO
            MANAGING DIVERSITY
            MINORITY OUTREACH

            "Does affirmative action work?  The short answer: Yes.  Since
            the effort to end job bias began in earnest 25 years ago,
            minorities have achieved major gains.  Yet affirmative action
            has become, for many, 'a four-letter word' that ignites racial
            tension."  Affirmative action encompasses both race and gender,
            and women have been among the greatest beneficiaries.  But it is
            the discussion of race that stirs the fiercest emotions.  And in
            trying to compensate for past discrimination against some
            people, companies can create fresh discrimination against
            others.  Many whites are resentful, and blacks feel affirmative
            action has stalled.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Demand Solid, Budgets Soft
 Author(s): Moad, Jeff
 Journal:   Datamation
            v. 37, n. 11   June 1, 1991   pp. 74-77
 Abstract:  527            JA
 Subjects:
            ECONOMICS
            INFORMATION SYSTEMS

            The latest DATAMATION/Cowen & Co. IS buying survey reveals a
            growing need for more mainframe MIPS and storage capacity, even
            as downsizing proceeds.  IS executives say their need for
            additional mainframe processing power and storage capacity will
            continue to grow at or above historical levels for at least the
            next 3-5 years.  Corporate users are shifting to the new
            technologies at a slow, measured pace.  Spending plans seem to
            be off across the board, however, although IS executives say
            it's not because they don't need more hardware and software
            tools to get the job done.  IS's need for increased PC, midrange
            and even mainframe capacity is up, even if the budget can't
            accommodate it.  But IS must first perceive some improvement in
            overall economic conditions if it is to loosen IT purchasing
            purse strings.


 Title:     The DATAMATION 100: World IT Sales Grow 8.9% to $278.5B
 Author(s): Kelly, Joseph
 Journal:   Datamation
            v. 37, n. 12   June 15, 1991   pp. 10-18,22-27+
 Abstract:  546            JA
 Subjects:
            COMPUTER INDUSTRY

            "Despite the recession, the top 100 North American information
            technology suppliers grew their PC, midrange, workstation,
            software and services businesses at a healthy clip in 1990.  But
            sellers of mainframes and datacomm equipment hit the skids." 
            The IS industry has always been considered resistant to
            recessions and, arguably, the conventional wisdom still holds
            true.  This year's figures show an industry that, in its fifth
            decade, still retains the trappings of growth, an industry still
            able to create products and services that hold their appeal
            whatever the economic climate.  The weak dollar also helped the
            US companies boost sales overseas, while limiting the appeal of
            imported products in the US.  Topping the growth list this year
            were workstation sales.  Digital ranks no. 2, after IBM and
            before Fujitsu, NEC, Hitachi, and Unisys.  Apple is ranked no.
            11, Wang no. 24.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  INNOVATIONS
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Predictors and Financial Outcomes of Corporate Entrepreneurship: An
            Exploratory Study
 Author(s): Zahra, Shaker A.; George Mason University
 Journal:   Journal of business venturing
            v. 6, n. 4   July 1991   pp. 259-285
 Abstract:  539            JA
 Subjects:
            BUSINESS TRENDS
            ENTREPRENEURSHIP
            FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE

            "Today, there is considerable scholarly and managerial interest
            in corporate entrepreneurship; that is, those activities that
            enhance a company's ability to innovate, take risk ,and seize
            opportunities in its markets.  Corporate entrepreneurship
            centers on creating new business by penetrating new markets,
            pursuing new business, or both.  Despite the growing recognition
            and use of corporate entrepreneurship, little empirical
            research has been done on its antecedents and potential
            association with company financial performance.  To fill this
            gap in the literature, this study proposes a model that
            identifies potential environmental, strategic, and
            organizational factors that may spur or stifle corporate
            entrepreneurship.  The model also highlights the potential
            associations between corporate entrepreneurship and corporate
            financial performance."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  INTERNATIONAL TRADE
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Ethics and Working With the Japanese: The Entrepreneur and the
            "Elite Course"
 Author(s): Gundling, Ernest
 Journal:   California management review
            v. 33, n. 3   Spring 1991   pp. 25-39
 Abstract:  534            JA
 Subjects:
            BUSINESS TACTICS
            ETHICS
            JAPAN

            "Ethical differences between US and Japanese corporations and
            individuals often emerge during the course of normal business
            transactions and are a source of considerable mutual tension. 
            This article looks at four common cases of ethical
            misunderstandings, each of which yields a particular type of
            issue:  family exclusivity, gray areas, loyalty, and commitment. 
            It then evaluates the standard dualistic interpretations for
            such ethical differences -- for example, American individualism
            versus Japanese group orientation -- and presents a more dynamic
            and interactive model based on the linked ideals of the
            'Entrepreneur' and the 'Elite Course' to explain both persistent
            ethical differences and a variety of countertrends."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  MANAGEMENT
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Leading a High-Commitment High-Performance Organization
 Author(s): Javidan, Mansour; Univ. of Calgary
 Journal:   Long range planning
            v. 24, n. 2   April 1991   pp. 28-36
 Abstract:  524            JA
 Subjects:
            EXECUTIVES
            LEADERSHIP

            "This article conducts a thorough review of the extensive
            literature on executive leadership.  It provides a definition
            for the concept of superior executive leadership and then
            presents a model explaining the key roles and attributes
            required to perform effectively in top management ranks.  The
            article then discusses the implications of this model for senior
            executives and describes how it can be used to assess the
            quality of executive performance."


 Title:     Open Communication Lines Before Attempting Total Quality
 Author(s): McLaurin, Donald L.; Bell, Shareen
 Journal:   Quality progress
            v. 24, n. 6   June 1991 (special issue)   pp. 25-28
 Abstract:  526            JA
 Subjects:
            QUALITY

            Despite the fact the the concept of total quality is extremely
            simple, its implementation is distressingly difficult.  The
            reason is often a lack of the communication skills necessary to
            achieve the cultural change needed for total quality.  What is
            meant is behavioral change, both personally and organizationally.  
            It means changing the way we do things -- the way we make 
            decisions, deal with customers, and most fundamentally, the way we 
            communicate and work with others in our own organizations.  
            Changing human behavior isn't easy; it requires skills that many 
            people lack but everyone can learn.  Just as management is
            responsible for recognizing relationships among successful total
            quality implementation, it is also responsible for providing the
            necessary skills to people within the organizations.


 Title:     Is The Baldrige Overblown?
 Author(s): Main, Jeremy
 Journal:   Fortune
            v. 124, n. 1   July 1, 1991   pp. 62-65
 Abstract:  528            JA
 Subjects:
            QUALITY

            The Malcolm Baldrige National Quality Award has become the
            business equivalent of the Academy Award, the Grand Slam, and
            the Pulitzer. The award has established a national standard for
            quality, and hundreds of major corporations use the criteria in
            its application form as a basic management guide.  But winners
            haven't necessarily solved their business problems and gone to
            capitalist heaven: despite the superior quality of their wares,
            IBM, Motorola and Xerox have all seen their profits and share
            prices hit hard since they won.  Nor is the Baldrige any
            guarantee that a company's products _are_ superior.  Executives
            often mistake the Baldrige as a cure-all, however it doesn't
            address the key elements of business -- innovation, financial
            performance, and long-term planning.  The fear is that the focus
            will be on winning, not achieving real quality.



 Title:     Preaching the Gospel: The Evangelists of New Technology
 Author(s): Beatty, Carol A.; Gordon, John R.M.
 Journal:   California management review
            v. 33, n. 3   Spring 1991   pp. 73-94
 Abstract:  535            JA
 Subjects:
            CAD/CAM
            MANUFACTURING
            NEW TECHNOLOGY

            "This article reports on ten field studies of the implementation
            of CAD/CAM in Canadian manufacturing firms of a three-year
            period, focusing on the implementation efforts of the sponsors
            (patriarchs) and champions (evangelists) in each case.  Although
            the patriarch appeared critical in the new technology involved,
            it was the evangelist who stayed with the project throughout its
            life and whose efforts were critical to its successful
            implementation and integration.  The successful evangelists were
            those who fulfilled three basic roles (pathfinding, problem
            solving, and implementing) and who demonstrated faith and
            persuasion.  The authors offer prescriptions for senior
            management with regard to the selection and management of
            project champions in the implementation of Advanced
            Manufacturing Technologies."


 Title:     Partnering as a Focused Market Strategy
 Author(s): Anderson, James C.; Narus, James A.
 Journal:   California management review
            v. 33, n. 3   Spring 1991   pp. 95-113
 Abstract:  536            JA
 Subjects:
            MARKETING

            "Partnership-building efforts, even when sought by a customer
            firm, may not be in the best interests of a supplier firm.  This
            article presents a comprehensive, strategic approach that offers
            managers guidance on decisions about which market segments and
            individual customer firms to target for close, collaborative
            relationships.  Firms can gain competitive advantage by
            augmenting a supplier's product offering for transactional
            customers."


 Title:     The Evolution of Strategic Alliances: Opportunities for Managerial
            Influences
 Author(s): Niederkofler, Martin
 Journal:   Journal of business venturing
            v. 6, n. 4   July 1991   pp. 237-257
 Abstract:  540            JA
 Subjects:  BOUNDARY SPANNING PROCESS
            COOPERATIVE FLEXIBILITY
            NEGOTIATIONS

            "The number of strategic alliances between large, established
            firms and small, new ventures is on the rise -- especially in
            industries affected by technological change.  Theoretically, the
            combination of a smaller firm's know-how with a larger firm's
            marketing system and financial prowess promises synergies that
            can contribute to both firms' competitive advantage.  Yet few of
            these partnerships result in tangible benefits.  On the
            contrary, strategic alliances often end in disarray, with
            nothing to show but wasted time and money, and possibly even a
            lawsuit.  The core hypothesis forwarded in this study is that a
            major cause for cooperative failure is managerial, and therefore
            controllable and potentially avoidable.  Although today's
            managers are well-trained in competitive behavior, cooperative
            situations require different skills -- skills that a majority of
            managers do not possess.  As a result, cooperation often appears
            to be managed reactively, rather than being based on a
            deliberate, proactive cooperation strategy.  A thorough analysis
            of six cases yields a theoretical model that describes the major
            factors impacting the evolution of strategic alliances."


 Title:     Climbing the New IS Corporate Ladder
 Author(s): Stokes, Stewart L.; QED Information Sciences Inc.
 Journal:   Information strategy
            v. 7, n. 4   Summer 1991   pp. 5-11
 Abstract:  550            JA
 Subjects:
            INFORMATION SYSTEMS
            MANAGEMENT DEVELOPMENT PROGRAMS
            SKILL SETS

            "A new mix of business, managerial, and technological skills is
            needed by IS professionals who want to be IS managers and by IS
            managers who not only want to ascend the MIS hierarchy but the
            traditional corporate career ladder as well.  This article
            examines the business, economic, technological, and cultural
            forces that influence the changing role of the IS managers,
            describes an IS leadership training program, and details the
            managerial attitude and performance needed for continuing
            corporate success."


 Title:     Can John Akers Save IBM?
 Author(s): Loomis, Carol J.
 Journal:   Fortune
            v. 124, n. 2   July 15, 1991   pp. 40-56
 Abstract:  553            JA
 Subjects:
            IBM
            MARKETING

            Even in late 1986, Chairman John F. Akers exhibited confidence
            in IBM: he asserted that, in four or five years, people would
            look back and see that the company's performance had been
            superlative.  Now, 4.5 years later, the stock was recently below
            $100, meaning that another $18 million in market capitalization
            is gone.  IBM's total revenues have dragged; its worldwide
            market share -- where each percentage point lost equals $3
            billion in annual sales -- has dropped from 30% to 21%; and its
            profits, although still the biggest of any company's in the
            world, have been roughed up as well.  John Akers, in an
            hour-long, wide-ranging interview, says the company is facing
            reality at last. He claims that IBM has been caught up in an
            industry moving so fast and changing so much that nobody in it
            can adjust quickly enough, and then conceded that no outside
            force was responsible for IBM's loss of market share.  The
            prognosis for IBM is uncertain; the product line was totally
            remade and is much improved, but marketing is still flawed.  IBM
            has still much to learn about serving customers and speeding
            products to market.  Sidebar articles include excerpts from the
            interview, and an article on the affect on Wall Street.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS (MIS)
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     The Yin and Yang of MIS
 Author(s): McClatchy, Will; Caldwell, Bruce
 Journal:   InformationWeek (Manhasset, N.Y.)
            n. 326   June 24, 1991   pp. 28-32
 Abstract:  537            JA
 Subjects:
            INFORMATION MANAGEMENT
            INFORMATION SYSTEMS
            JAPAN
            MANAGEMENT
            UNITED STATES

            "Whether Japanese companies are viewed as a competitive threat,
            an object lesson, potential allies or employers, or all of the
            above, information chiefs in the US are faced with the need to
            understand the differences between Japanese and American
            information management practices.  Those differences are
            unarguably significant, ranging as they do from basic
            communication technologies to career tracking.  On the broadest
            level, Japanese CIOs emphasize operational systems to manage
            transaction functions, [while] on the other hand, American CIOs
            place priority on management and financial systems to control
            the business function.  That difference reflects the
            consensus-oriented, bottom-up approach used in decision-making
            in Japan; in contrast, Americans take a top-down approach. 
            Japan's focus on corporate loyalty, coupled with its methodical,
            detailed approach to information systems, means Japanese IS
            managers, such as Kawasaki's Roger Peterson, stress process much
            more than whiz-bang technology."

 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  MANUFACTURING
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     The Relational Roots of Integrated Manufacturing
 Author(s): Gomsi, Jeff; DeSanti, Mike; Servio Logic
 Journal:   Information strategy
            v. 7, n. 4   Summer 1991   pp. 33-42
 Abstract:  551            JA
 Subjects:
            CAD/CAM
            CIM
            DBMS
            OBJECT-ORIENTED DATA BASES
            RELATIONAL DATA BASES

            "To perform as advertised, the dispersed and often incompatible
            elements of computer integrated manufacturing (CIM) systems must
            share data through a data base management system (DBMS) that
            presents a consistent view of that companywide data to all
            users, allowing them to update the data in a shared-access
            environment, while providing security, transaction logging, and
            query languages that sort data and generate management reports. 
            Relational and object-oriented DBMSs -- the most promising for
            CIM -- are especially suited to report-intensive applications
            (e.g., manufacturing resource planning [MRP]) and workstation
            applications (e.g. , computer-aided design [CAD] and
            computer-aided engineering [CAE]). This report explores these
            two data base models, focusing on commercially available
            systems."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  MULTIPROCESSING
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Invasion of the Superservers
 Author(s): Kindley, Mark
 Journal:   VARbusiness
            v. 7, n. 8   June 1991   pp. 40-50
 Abstract:  518            JA
 Subjects:
            CLIENT/SERVER COMPUTING
            DEC
            SERVER TECHNOLOGY
            VARS

	    "Superservers are the future of computing."  They transcend
            file- and peripheral-sharing and accomplish the full paradigm
            shift to client-server computing, allowing users to run whatever
            they want on whatever machines are on their desktops and still
            be able to communicate with everyone else. They are even
            optimized for network-based distributed applications, which they
            will probably run with ease -- when there are some.  Yet for all
            of their multiprocessing capabilities, all the new class of
            hardware known as superservers has done in its first year is
            inspire confusion.  What distinguishes this crowd of specialized
            servers from its predecessors  "is that the depth of functionality 
            the superserver vendors are attempting to provide has never been 
            accomplished using standard system software that runs off-the-shelf 
            applications.  To accomplish open systems, superserver designers 
            have to do no less than reconcile all the incompatibilities the 
            computer industry has shown such a genius for propagating. No 
            single company, not even IBM, can do this on its own.  It depends 
            on tentative alliances between companies that are much more 
            accustomed to competing with each other than collaborating...
            Superservers, in fact, will make client-server computing a reality, 
            and eventually every computer platform will be affected.  The 
            technology emerging today means you are going to have access to 
            other people and they are going to have access to you."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  NETWORKS
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Smart LAN Hubs Take Control
 Author(s): Herman, James
 Journal:   Data communications
            v. 20, n. 7   June 1991   pp. 62-75,142,143
 Abstract:  508            JA
 Subjects:
            INTERNETWORKS
            LOCAL AREA NETWORKS

            "It's a fact of life: Highly developed organisms like LAN
            internets must have sophisticated central nervous systems if
            they are to survive and evolve.  Smart LAN hubs are now
            asserting themselves as the key nerve centers of these complex
            computer nets.  When used to their fullest potential,
            intelligent hubs can serve as a universal tool for configuring
            and managing heterogeneous architectures assembled from LANs,
            routers, bridges, and servers.  Thus, organizations that rapidly
            come up to speed on smart hub technology will have the edge on
            building successful internetworks."


 Title:     Multiprotocol Routers: Invasion of the Computer Giants
 Author(s): Hindin, Eric M.
 Journal:   Data communications
            v. 20, n. 8   June 21, 1991   pp. 39-52
 Abstract:  547            JA
 Subjects:
            INTEGRATION
            ROUTERS
            SYSTEMS

            The brisk sales and heady growth rates racked up by vendors of
            multiprotocol routers in recent years stem from one basic
            change in corporate networking: network managers have grown
            tired of installing and maintaining parallel networks to
            accommodate different types of traffic.  Systems vendors have
            finally gotten the message that their network products don't
            measure up to user needs, and they're starting to do something
            about it.  IBM, Unisys, DEC, and Hewlett-Packard are drastically
            overhauling their network product lines to offer customers at
            least the hope of evolving to a single-backbone network.  New
            products are appearing that will eventually let customers build
            one network that can handle any type of data traffic, and they
            can be used apart from or in conjunction with the vendors'
            conventional network gear, which has been widely shunned in
            favor of multiprotocol routers.  The systems giants still have
            a long way to go in terms of technology and innovation to catch
            the leading router vendors, but each is counting on its massive
            size and resources to make up ground quickly.


 Title:     Frame Relay: The Next Generation of X.25 Networks
 Author(s): Muller, Nathan J.
 Journal:   Journal of data & computer communications
            v. 4, n. 1   Summer 1991   pp. 4-13
 Abstract:  548            JA
 Subjects:
            BROADBAND SERVICES
            COMMUNICATIONS
            CORPORATE MIGRATION STRATEGIES
            HIGH BANDWIDTH SERVICES

            "A variety of new packet transmission technologies can achieve
            throughput rates greater than conventional X.25.  One such
            technology, fast packet (a generic term applied to many
            different high-speed transmission technologies), is already a
            success on private T1 networks.  Another packet technology is
            frame relay, which achieves high throughput principally by
            removing error correction and other overhead functions from the
            network.  This article discusses frame relay in detail.  It
            begins with a review of its predecessor, X.25, and ends with
            some conjecture about the future of frame relay technology."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  NEW PRODUCT DEVELOPMENT
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Product Development as a Process
 Author(s): Whiting, Rick
 Journal:   Electronic business
            v. 17, n. 12   June 17, 1991   pp. 30-36
 Abstract:  542            JA
 Subjects:
            ELECTRONICS INDUSTRY
            MANUFACTURING

            "During the 1970s and early 1980s, the US electronics industry
            ceded a critical advantage to Japan when American companies
            proved to be too slow in adopting just-in-time, continuous
            improvement, and other innovative manufacturing techniques. 
            Today, electronics vendors have an opportunity to gain or lose
            an equally critical advantage in the way they develop new
            products.  Product development is about to become a key
            competitive battleground, where such advantages as shorter time
            to market and higher product quality will be won or lost." 


 Title:     Managing Product Development From the Top
 Author(s): Whiting, Rick
 Journal:   Electronic business
            v. 17, n. 12   June 17, 1991   pp. 40-44
 Abstract:  543            JA
 Subjects:
            MANAGEMENT

            "To top-tier managers, the process of product development is
            often a black box.  For these managers, the question becomes one
            of tracking the progress of development projects in terms of time,
            cost, and design, but without becoming so intrusive that they
            become part of the problem rather than the solution.  An
            increasing number of companies are using a process, often called
            'phase review', to provide executives with windows into that
            black box.  Phase review is a two-tier approach in which a core
            team of engineers, marketing personnel, and others oversee
            projects on a day-to-day basis."  With this process, management
            knows where to work and where not to tinker.  It allows management
            to become involved early in the development process, rather than
            managing crises later on.  But it is not infallible; management
            must recognize that phase reviews look at the larger picture by
            focusing on the total product and surrounding business decisions. 
            Questions about the product itself are left to the design reviews
            which occur during each phase.


 Title:     In Search of the Perfect Product
 Author(s): Burrows, Peter
 Journal:   Electronic business
            v. 17, n. 12   June 17, 1991   pp. 70-74
 Abstract:  544            JA
 Subjects:
            ELECTRONICS INDUSTRY
            PRODUCT DESIGN
            QUALITY FUNCTION

            The US electronics industry has a dubious but time-honored
            tradition of making technologically excellent products that bomb
            simply because customers don't need them.  The reason for this
            is that product design has long been dominated by product
            designers, not by customers.  This is why GenRad (Concord, MA)
            and many of the biggest names in electronics are working with a
            powerful management tool called quality function deployment
            (QFD) to put the drawing board back into the customer's hands. 
            DEC, Hewlett-Packard, IBM, Intel, and Texas Instruments have all
            announced or plan to announce products developed using this
            technique.  QFD makes extensive use of matrices to translate
            "customer care-abouts" into products that most nearly fulfill
            customers' wish lists.  And it's not easy -- many companies
            (including DEC) have ended up with 100-by-100 matrices to fill
            in, wasting months of precious time.  Team members often get
            caught up in the details of the exercise while the market window
            closes.  Many companies, especially younger ones with roots in
            the more customer-oriented 1980s, are highly skeptical of the
            formality and intense attention to detail required by QFD.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  PACKAGING
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Electronic Packaging in the 1990's - A Perspective from Asia
 Author(s): Ohsaki, Takaaki
 Journal:   IEEE transactions on components, hybrids and manufacturing technology
            v. 14, n. 2   June 1991   pp. 254-261
 Abstract:  531            JA
 Subjects:
            ASIA
            COMMUNICATIONS
            ELECTRONICS

            "Evolution of many electronic packaging techniques is required
            by the advanced information society.  An overview of the present
            status and future trends in electronic packaging technologies
            are reviewed.  Advanced modules packaged with these technologies
            are shown in three major systems: switching systems, transmission 
            systems, and computer systems."


 Title:     Electronic Packaging in the 1990's - A Perspective from America
 Author(s): Tummala, Rao R.; IBM Corp.
 Journal:   IEEE transactions on components, hybrids and manufacturing technology
            v. 14, n. 2   June 1991   pp. 262-271
 Abstract:  532            JA
 Subjects:
            ELECTRONICS
            SEMICONDUCTORS
            UNITED STATES

            "Far from passive containers for semiconductor chips in the
            1960's and 1970's, advanced packages in tomorrow's most advanced
            computers pose at least as many engineering and scientific
            challenges as the chips that they interconnect, power, and cool. 
            New packaging designs in the 1990's may be expected to lead
            their developers into uncharted areas of science.  The
            packaging community in the US, consisting of industry,
            universities, and national laboratories have finally recognized
            the fact that while semiconductors continue to be improved upon
            relentlessly for performance as measured in picoseconds, it is
            the packaging that will set the limit on system performance in
            nanoseconds.  This paper reviews the US packaging thrusts to
            address these and other related issues."


 Title:     Electronic Packaging in the 1990's - The Perspective from Europe
 Author(s): Wessely, Hermann; et al
 Journal:   IEEE transactions on components, hybrids and manufacturing technology
            v. 14, n. 2   June 1991   pp. 272-284
 Abstract:  533            JA
 Subjects:
            ELECTRONICS
            EUROPE
            SEMICONDUCTORS

            "In the past, IC chips in packages, supplied by the IC
            manufacturer, have been used in large quantities.  Since for
            several years the usage of bare chips has become more
            considerable, bare chips have started to replace the packaged IC. 
            With the use of an appropriate packaging and interconnection
            technology, using bare chips can result in significant
            improvements in overall circuit density which can be a guide to
            higher equipment operating speeds and more cost efficiency,
            especially in the mainframe area.  The important question arises
            whether presently practiced technologies will be adequate to
            accommodate the demands of the 1990's in Europe.  Common
            European activities have been started in the field of research
            and development of information technology.  ESPRIT and JESSI are
            the industrial cooperative programs.  Part of ESPRIT is APACHIP,
            a project to develop high performance technology."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  PERSONAL COMPUTERS
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     A Battle is Brewing on the Desktop
 Author(s): Curran, Lawrence
 Journal:   Electronics
            v. 64, n. 6   June 1991   pp. 41-46
 Abstract:  545            JA
 Subjects:
            DESKTOP COMPUTING
            WORKSTATIONS

            "Just when it looked as if the Intel 80386 microprocessor had
            run its course as a major stimulant to the personal computer
            market, a raft of new developments heralds a battle for control
            of the desktop and renewed vigor in PC sales.  Managers
            pondering when to replace their older desktop machines will get
            more bang for their bucks in the wake of key market moves, not
            the least of which is Intel Corp.'s aggressive plan to extend
            the architecture and performance of the industry-standard x86
            microprocessor family.  Some of the other forces that will
            breathe new life onto the desktop include the advent of the
            Advanced Computing Environment consortium, the runaway success
            of Microsoft Corp.'s Windows 3.0 graphical user interface, and
            Digital Equipment Corp.'s bold venture to get back into the PC
            business, piggybacking on on Intel-built 486-based platform. 
            But the initiative of the 21-member ACE consortium, if it
            succeeds, will also boost sales of the PC's big brother, the
            workstation.  That will sharpen the competition between vendors
            of x86 PCs and Unix-based RISC workstations, for desktop space
            historically conceded to venerable DOS machines."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  RISC (REDUCED INSTRUCTION SET COMPUTING)
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     IBM RISC System/6000: Architecture and Performance
 Author(s): Oehler, Richard R.; Blasgen, Michael W.; IBM Research Division
 Journal:   IEEE micro
            v. 11, n. 3   June 1991   pp. 14-17,56-62
 Abstract:  519            JA
 Subjects:
            IBM
            INSTRUCTION SETS
            MICROPROCESSORS

            "The IBM RISC System/600 realizes the idea of a superscalar
            microprocessor.  The architecture of this processor has its
            instruction set specifically designed for a superscalar machine
            containing three independent units -- branch, fixed-point, and
            floating-point.  Besides the emphasis on superscalar, the design
            also emphasizes high-performance floating-point operations."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  SOFTWARE
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Top 50 : Profiles of the Leading Independent Software Companies
 Author(s): Hodges, Judith; Melewski, Deborah
 Journal:   Software magazine
            v. 11, n. 8   June 1991/special   pp. 23-26
 Abstract:  541            JA
 Subjects:
            COMPUTER INDUSTRY

            "While the US economy may have been slow, the software industry
            in 1990 grew at an impressive rate, especially in sales outside
            the US.  The Top 50 independent suppliers in SOFTWARE MAGAZINE's
            annual survey reported combined revenues for worldwide packaged
            software sales of just under $10.7 billion for calendar year
            1990.  This represents a 29% increase over 1989, in which the Top
            50 ranking companies collectively achieved $8.3 billion.  For
            independent software vendors, topping $10 billion marked a
            banner year.  Collectively, for the first time in the software
            industry, they outperformed IBM.  However, IBM still managed
            strong growth in both US and non-US software operations.  Digital
            Equipment's percentage of software revenues to total corporate
            revenues nearly matches IBM's.  David Stone [said] that software
            sales in fiscal 1990 accounted for 15% of total revenues, or
            nearly $2 billion.  And, Stone said, 'the potential is there to
            be 30% [of sales].'"  Microsoft is ranked #2, Lotus #3, Novell
            #7, The Santa Cruz Operation #26.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  STORAGE DEVICES
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Tape Vendors Face Integrators
 Author(s): Simpson, David
 Journal:   Systems integration
            v. 24, n. 5   May 1991   pp. 34-39
 Abstract:  512            JA
 Subjects:
            BACKUP STORAGE
            MASS STORAGE STRATEGIES

            "SYSTEMS INTEGRATION rounded up some of the best and brightest
            to tackle the issue of high-capacity backup storage. 
            Representatives from seven leading storage vendors, two systems
            integrators and two of the magazine's editors participated in
            the discussion.  This article is what this panel of experts has
            to say about competing high-capacity backup technologies -- 1/4"
            tape cartridge, 4mm digital audio tape and 8mm helical scan."
            Media interchangeability occupied much discussion time.  Other
            comments: With multiserver networks serving thousands of nodes,
            the tape drive is becoming more important.  For DAT, the need is
            to support DCLZ, and not confuse customers with an interim
            solution.  QIC-40 and QIC-90 standards are incompatible with
            OS/2 and Unix; it's a huge problem.


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  SYSTEMS
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     The Next Next
 Author(s): Raney, Scott
 Journal:   UNIXWorld
            v. 8, n. 7   July 1991   pp. 57-64
 Abstract:  523            JA
 Subjects:
            GRAPHICS
            PERSONAL COMPUTERS
            WORKSTATIONS

            What exactly is a Nextstation?  It's neither a PC nor a typical
            UNIX workstation, but offers elements of the best of both.  It's
            inexpensive like a PC, and requires little in the way of system
            administration.  It sports a multitasking operating system and a 
            high performance CPU like a workstation.  The Nextstation
            resides in the fuzzy domain between PCs and workstations.  With
            the second generation Next platform, Steve Jobs has accomplished
            what he set out to do: build a forward-looking machine that, in
            theory, one-ups the best from Apple and undercuts the incursions
            of Sun and IBM into the professional workstation market of
            high-end application users of desktop publishing, graphic arts,
            and multimedia.  


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  TECHNOLOGY
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Pass the Plasma,...Please
 Author(s): Pennisi, Elizabeth
 Journal:   Science news (Washington, D.C.)
            v. 139, n. 20   May 18, 1991   pp. 312-314
 Abstract:  513            JA
 Subjects:
            CHIP MANUFACTURE
            MICROELECTRONICS
            SEMICONDUCTORS

            Today interdisciplinary collaborations are occurring ever more
            frequently as individuals, companies, universities and
            government agencies try to keep pace with rapidly changing
            technologies.  Many researchers have decided that these
            exchanges must occur if the US is to regain its high-technology
            leadership, especially in microelectronics.  Semiconductors
            represent one area where such teamwork has become critical and
            where researchers, the US government and industry have changed
            their work habits to spur technological growth.  By focusing on
            specific problems and crossing disciplinary boundaries, these
            players can make progress faster than ever before.  Highlighted
            in this article are three researchers who have applied their
            diverse backgrounds to plasma processing, an increasingly
            important step in the making of computer chips.  And many
            researchers believe that this collaboration could serve as a
            model for spurring progress in other technologies.


 Title:     Strategic Partnering Aids Technology Transfer
 Author(s): Green, John A.S.; Brupbacher, John; Goldheim, David; Martin Marietta
 Journal:   Research technology management
            v. 34, n. 4   July-August 1991   pp. 26-31
 Abstract:  552            JA
 Subjects:
            STRATEGIC PARTNERSHIPS
            TECHNOLOGY TRANSFER

            "This article describes a method of technology transfer that has
            evolved out of the need to transfer promising technologies in
            the 'engineered materials' field to full-scale production and
            application, when the inventing company is not in the materials
            production industry.  The method that solves the technology
            transfer problem is to develop a strategic partner who is in the
            materials business and is motivated to be a licensed producer. 
            The experience base for the technology transfer discussed here
            has involved high-strength aluminum alloys and metal matrix
            composites."


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  TELECOMMUNICATION
 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 Title:     Has ISDN Turned the Corner?
 Author(s): Finneran, Michael
 Journal:   Business communications review
            v. 21, n. 6   June 1991   pp. 43-46
 Abstract:  530            JA
 Subjects:
            ISDN
            NETWORKS

            "The much-maligned ISDN market in the US received a shot in the
            arm in late February 1991 with the announcement for a new plan
            for deployment: National ISDN 1.  While many in the industry
            remain skeptical, National ISDN 1 is a major step forward in
            making ISDN-based services available to a wide range of
            potential customers at a reasonable price.  There were two major
            parts to this announcement: first, the major central office
            switch vendors -- AT&T Network Systems, Northern Telecomm and
            Siemens -- have agreed to support a common subscriber interface
            standard for both basic and primary rate; second, the RBOCs will
            tariff ISDN services and deploy them aggressively within
            their networks.  These issues address two of the major obstacles
            that have prevented an ISDN market from developing."


Distribution:


TO:
judy amar@DLB       DENNIS DICKERSON@DL STEVE DONOVAN@DLO   Tommy Gaut@HSO      
DONALD HEIDORN@DYO  Ed Hurry@DVO        yoshinori ishii@TKO phil james@DLB      
norio2 murakami@TKO Louis Pau@VBE       jim rather@HSO      Pat Roach@VBE       
Czarena Siebert@HSO Mike Sievers@HSO    Dale Stout@HSO      Susan Sugar@MWO     
Sherry Williams@HSO Mike Willis@HSO     Tom Wilson@HST      

18.10Fwd: Western Technology Digest V6 #2MR4DEC::ROACHTANSTAAFL !Fri Oct 25 1991 00:09546

                  I N T E R O F F I C E   M E M O R A N D U M

                                        Doc. No:  005984
                                        Date:     23-Oct-1991 08:45pm EDT
                                        From:     BEANE
                                                  BEANE@SHLACT@SELECT@MRGATE@NRGATE@NRO
                                        Dept:      
                                        Tel No:    

TO:  PATRICK ROACH@LMO


Subject: Fwd: Western Technology Digest V6 #2                        

********************************************************************************
*****                  WESTERN TECHNOLOGY DIGEST                           *****
****                  VOLUME 6		 NUMBER 2			    ****
***                   OCT/NOV              1991                              ***
**                   Mary Hayes 	 Editor                               **
********************************************************************************
 
WESTERN TECHNOLOGY DIGEST is a monthly technology transfer forum for 
communicating research, technical, and competitive information between 
Digital and research communities.
		
		********************************
 
THIS MAGAZINE IS RESTRICTED FOR INTERNAL USE ONLY BY EMPLOYEES OF DIGITAL 
EQUIPMENT CORPORATION.  @ Copyright Digital Equipment Corporation 1987, 1988,
1989, 1990, 1991.
*******************************************************************************
  
The purpose of WTD is to inform Digital readers of events and activities of
interest in the research community.  The style of this digest will be to 
provide abstracts or short articles of interest with references to more 
detailed information for you to pursue should you wish to follow-up.
 
We welcome contributions from anyone who is sponsoring research, doing
work. 
 
We also encourage comments from readers and Letters to the Editor, which
will be published with the author's permission.
 
If you wish to subscribe to WTD or change your subscription address
or to submit papers or articles please send mail to REESA::HAYES

If you wish to receive copies of the articles mentioned in WTD, please send
all requests to TENAYA. Please include your mail stop as the articles
are sent in hard copy format. Also please note, if you are ordering copies
of articles from past issues, you must but the issue, title and authors name.
********************************************************************************
			TABLE OF CONTENTS
			THIS ISSUE = 

I.	Spatial Domain Decomposition in Silicon Devices and Its
	Application To Transient Device Analysis - Howard Read,
	Shigetaka Kumashiro & Andrzej Strojwas

II.	Coloring and Clique Partitioning for Data Path Allocation
	- David Springer

III.	Design for Manufacturability: "Good, better, best/never let it
	rest/until my good is better/and my better best" - Paul Adler

	Designing Bureaucracies That Work: The Case of Engineering
	Change Management - Paul Adler

IV.	Imaging Polished Sapphire with Atomic Force Microscopy
	R.C. Barrett & C. F. Quate

V.	Steady-State Analysis of RBM in a Rectangle: Numerical 
	Methods and a Queueing Application - J.G. Gai & Michael Harrison

VI.	Process and Device Modeling - James Plummer

VII.	The CIS Newsletter - Carmen Miraflor

VIII.	The Strategist's Role in Shortening Product Development
	- Donald Reinertsen & Preston Smith

IX.	How To Deal With AIDS In The Work Place - Martha McDonald

X.	Women Engineerings A Very Rare Breed - Gail Robinson,
	Deirdre Drummey & Signe Myers

XI.	From Affimative Action To Affirming Diversity
	- R. Roosevelt Thomas, Jr.

XII.	Emotion And Stress: Stanford Center for Organization Research

XIII.	WTD Statics

XIV. 	Automated Paper Request Form
*****************************************************************************
	Spatial Domain Decomposition in Silicon Devices and Its 
	        Application to Transient Device Analysis

	  Howard Read, Shigetaka Kumashiro & Andrzej Strojwas
	      ECE Department, Carnegie Mellon University

	The transient simulation of multiple semiconductor devices is critical
in the analysis of dynamic effects such as latch-up. During transient 
simulation, a large system of coupled nonlinear partial differential
equations (PDE) must be solved with considerable effort. In this paper,
they present a method of decomposing the spatial domain of silicon (containing
one or more devices) into smaller subdomains. A transient simulation
algorithm can then use different time-steps within each subdomains and avoid
a full solution of the nonlinear PDE's in areas where the solution does not
change rapidly.
********************************************************************************
	Coloring and Clique Partitioning for Data Path Allocation

		           David L. Springer
	     SRC-CMU Research Center for Computer-Aided Design
                       Carnegie Mellon University

	The purpose of this research is to explore new techniques for
automatic high-level synthesis of VLSI systems. In particular we are
exploring more powerful graph theoretic algorithms to determine which
elements in the behavioral description should share physical resources.
	In high-level synthesis, conflict and compatibility graphs have
been used to represent the relationships between elements to be mapped
onto shared resources. A legal mapping of elements onto shared resources
is represented by a legal node of coloring of a conflict graph or a clique
portion of a compatibility graph. One of the main problems with using 
clique partitioning and node coloring for synthesis is that on general
graph they are NP-complete.
******************************************************************************* 
	Design for Manufacturability: "Good, better, best/never 
        let it rest/until my good is better/and my better best."

			      Paul Adler
       Dept. of Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management
                         Stanford University

	The objective of this paper is to better define some of the key
challenges in improving the fit between product design parameters and
manufacturing process parameters--commonly referred to as Design for
Manufacturability (DFM). Paul Adler is interpreting manufacturing
broadly, to include all the issues associated with the interface
between product development and manufacturing-- issues such as
fabrication, assembly, and test.


Designing Bureaucracies That Work: The Case Of Engineering Change Management

			    Paul Adler
	Dept. of Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management
 			 Stanford University

	Managing the EC process: initial findings.
They found that while EC process improvement task forces ostensibly
pursued goals such as decreasing processing time, processing effort,
and the number of ECs, the biggest hurdle was invariably getting their
arms around the EC process. In most firms, the EC process is not very 
well understood. No single department oversees the entire process. It
is thus uncertain who participates, why they participate, what they do,
how long they take to do it. The first step for many firms is thus
simply to understand what the typical EC process is (or what variations
in EC processing are pursued).
********************************************************************************
	   Imaging Polished Sapphire with Atomic Force Microscopy

		      R.C. Barrett and C.F. Quate
		       Dept. of Applied Physics
		         Stanford University

	The polished faces of c- and r- oriented single-crystal sapphire have
been studied with an optical deflection-sensed atomic force microscope using
microfabricated cantilevers and a fiber optic-based light source. Images taken
with repulsive contact forces reveal equally spaced atomic steps. The spacing
between these steps corresponds with the off-axis angle of polishing 
(~ 10 arac-min). An unidentified large-scale periodicity (~ 1 micron) is
also observed. Attractive-mode images of the same sample have been obtained
using electrostatic forces. This was accomplished by evaporating a thin
metal film on the sample side of the cantilever. Charge is deposited on the
sample by applying a bias to an electrode attached to the back side of the
sample and allowing it to come to equilibrium. These attractive-mode images
reveal the same large-scale periodicity as with repulsive mode, but with an
increased amplitude. This result implies that the features are more than
simple topography, and possibly correspond to regions of charge accumulation.
**************************************************************************************
	Steady-State Analysis of RBM in a Rectangle: Numerical Methods
		       and a Queueing Application

		     J.G. Dai and J. Michael Harrison
		       Graduate School of Business
		          Stanford University

	Multidimensionsl reflected Brownian motions, also called requlated
Brownian motions or simply RBM's, arise as approximate models of Queueing
networks. Thus the stationary distributions of these diffusion processes
are of interest for steady-state analysis of the corresponding Queueing
systems. This paper considers two-dimensional semimartingale RBM's with
rectangular state space, which include the RBM's that serve as approximate
models of finite queues in tandem. The stationary distribution of such an
RBM is uniquely characterized by a certain basic adjoint relationship, and
an algorithm is proposed for numerical solution of that relationship.
******************************************************************************
		      Process and Device Modeling

		         James D. Plummer
		CIS: Center for Integrated Systems
			Stanford University

	Computer simulation offers a potentially powerful tool for 
designing new semiconductor devices or processes. Process and device
simulators have been used for many years, but it is only in recent years
that their use has become widespread. The reason for this increased use
is simply that modern device structures are so complex that purely 
experimental design is very difficult and very expensive. The approach
taken at Stanford in developing these kinds of simulators has been to
base them on the best available physical models. They believe that this
approach increases the range of design problems that the simulators can
address.
********************************************************************************
		The CIS Visitor Program Revisited

		        Carmen Miraflor
		CIS: Center for Integrated Systems
		      Stanford University

	The CIS Visitor Program began almost a decade ago when the CIS
was founded as a University research center. Specially designed to 
promote in-depth interaction between industrial scientists, engineers,
and researchers in academia through residency at the Center. The program
facilitates contact and collaboration among the visitors, faculty and
students. CIS provides office space and supplies, computer and 
telecommunications support. The visitor usually connects with a professor
whose research work is of strong interest to the researcher and her/his
company. The visiting team averages eighteen months, but has been as short
as one quarter and as long as four years. Participation in the program is
generally initiated by a Partner company and connection with a faculty
member and his research group is facilitated by CIS. Since the program's
inception, there have been 40 such match-ups in a spectrum of research
interests ranging from basic electronic material to devices, to systems
and software. 
	From Digital Equipment Corporation is Reesa Abrams. Reesa is the
Manager of the Technology Transfer Program which in an intrapreneurial
activity within Digital. Her job is to increase the partnership between
Digital and Stanford. This includes matching Stanford researchers to 
Digital's strategic needs. Additionally she serves as an alternate to 
the Industrial Advisory Boards at CIS, SIMA and CIFE. At CIS she is a 
member of the Marketing Committee which pursues new industrial members
for CIS. At SIMA she is outgoing chair of the Industrial Projects 
Committee which solicits industrial feedback and advice on SIMA seed
research. Reesa is also chair of the SIMA Manufacturing Models Lab
Administrative Committee. At CIFE, Reesa is active in CIFE's Management
of Technology group. Reesa comes with twenty-five years of experience
in high technology industry but success also springs from harnessing
the resources she finds at Stanford and promptly communicating this
information to various sites within Digital.

	If you would like more information about the CIS visitor program,
 SIMA and CIFE, please send email to Reesa Abrams at TENAYA::ABRAMS, or
call DTN 543-3433.
*********************************************************************************
	  The Strategist's Role in Shortening Product Development

		Donald G. Reinertsen & Preston G. Smith
		    Journal of Business Strategy

	Many corporate strategists feel that the
challenge of shortening product development cycles is unique to the
realm of the operating manager. Product development is viewed either
as a narrow tactical issue to be wrestled with by line management or as
an organizational strength or weakness to be exploited by means of 
insightful strategies. This perspective can mislead strategists into
believing that they have no role to play in shortening product development
cycles--and this belief can become a self-fulfilling prophecy.
**************************************************************************
		How To Deal With AIDS In The Work Place:
  Here's How Some Forward-Thinking Firms Are Handling The Crisis.

			Martha McDonald
                       Business & Health

	The center for Disease Control estimates that 1 million Americans
are infected with the HIV virus. Some experts, however, believe the 
figure is closer to 1.5 million. As the numbers climb, more American
business will feel the sting of the epidemic through rising health
insurance and disability costs.
	Is American business prepared for AIDS in the 1990's? Experts
shake their heads emphatically, saying "NO". Paul Ross, corporate manager
of the AIDS Program Office at Digital Equipment Corporation, "By and
large, business are hoping if they don't talk about AIDS- it will go
away. We are in a heavy state of denial. Although many companies continue
to respond negatively to the AIDS crisis - even to the point of terminating
the employment of HIV-positive employees and discriminating against them
in hiring, other companies are reacting in more positive ways. Levi 
struss and Digital Equipment have faced the epidemic head on by designing
anti-discrimination policies and work-site education programs that foster
a compassionate and enlightened work force.
********************************************************************************
		  Women Engineers - A Very Rare Breed

	      Gail Robinson, Deirdre Drummey & Signe Myers
		            Design News 

	Pick almost any profession and you'l find that American
women have made enormous progress in recent years. But there's
one glaring exception- engineering. The National Science Foundation's
latest finding reveal that women make up just 3.5% of the engineering
workforce.
	What factors discourage women from entering engineering?
Why do they shy away from a field that can be marketable, lucrative,
and challenging? This report seeks to answer these questions based
on interviews with experts and the finding form a survey of 1000 women
engineers. Finally, this report describes what steps companies, schools,
and the government are taking to attract women to engineering - at a
time when the field needs them most.
********************************************************************************
	       From Affirmative Action To Affirming Diversity

			R. Roosevelt Thomas, Jr.
			Harvard Business Review

	Sooner or later, affirmative action will die a natural death. Its
achievements have been stupendous, but if we look at the premises that underlie
it, we find assumptions and priorities that look increasingly shopworn.
Thirty years ago, affirmative action was invented on the basis of these
five appropriate premises:
	1. Adult, white males make up something called the U.S. business 
	   mainstream.
	2. The U.S. economic edifice is a solid, unchanging institution with
	   more than enough space for everyone.
	3. Women, blacks, immigrants, and other minorities should be allowed
	   in as a matter of public policy and common decency.
	4. Widespread racial, ethnic, and sexual prejudice keeps them out.	5
	5. Legal and social coercion are necessary to bring about change.
Today all five premises need revising. 
**********************************************************************************
	        Stanford Center For Organizations Research
			Fall Colloquium Series

		         EMOTION AND STRESS

		         Stanford University
		     Graduate School of Business

This series is free for all to attend. These talks will be held in Room 87,
in the Graduate School of Business at Stanford University. They will be
on Thursdays, 3:00 - 4:30pm. Please send me email if you have any questions.
Mary Hayes, TENAYA::HAYES.

	OCTOBER 24:	Robert G. Eccles - Graduate School of Business Admin
			Harvard University
			"The Use and Abuse of Rhetoric: Getting Action 
			 in Organizations"

	NOVEMBER 7:	Robert A. Baron - School of Management 
			R.P.I.
			"Environmentally-Induced Positive Affect: It's Effects
			 on Task Performance and Interpersonal Relations in
			 Work Settings"

	NOVEMBER 14:	Stephen Barley - Industrial Relations
			Cornell University
			"Toward a cultural Theory of Stress"

	DECEMBER 5:	Robert Sutton - Industrial Eng & Eng Management
			Stanford University
			"The Expression of Emotion in Organizational Life"
********************************************************************************
			WTD PAPER STATICS 

MAY 1991

AUTHOR				TITLE				# OF REQUESTS
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Edward Steinmuller	"The Economics of Alternative Integrated
			 Circuit Manufacturing Technology: A
			 Framework and Appraisal"
Stanford University							4
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
Samual Wood &		"Modeling the Performance of 
Krishna Saraswat	 Cluster-Based Fabs"				
Stanford University							1
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thierry Barsalou,	"Representing Probabilistic Knowledge
R. Martin Chavez &	 in Relational Databases"
Stanford University							10
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thierry Barsalou, 	"Hypertext Interface for Decision-Support
R. Martin Chavez &	 Systems: A Case Study"
Gio Wiederhold			
Stanford University							17
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thierry Barsalou,	"Knowledge-Directed Mediation Between
Gio Wiederhold		 Application Objects and Base Data"
Stanford University							10
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gio Wiederhold		"Outer Joins & Filters for Istantiating
Byung Suk Lee		 Objects from Relational Database Through
			 Views."
Stanford University							10
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thierry Barsalou, 	"Knowledge-Based Mapping of Relations
Gio Wiederhold		 into Objects"
Stanford University							14
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Thierry Barsalou,	"Updating Relational Databases Through
Gio Wiederhold, 	 Object-Based Views"
Arthur Keller
Stanford University							9
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Gio Wiederhold, 	"Management of Complex Structural
Kincho Law, 		 Engineering Objects in a Relational
Thierry Barsalou	 Framework"
Stanford University							10
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
G.F. Franklin		"A Real Time Control for Semiconductor
			 Equipment - Slides"
Stanford University							1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Jeff Pan		"Knowledge Service, Library & Software
			 Integration - Slides"
Stanford University							1
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Steven Tang, 		"Structured User Interface Builder
Ernest Wood, 		 & Applying it to CIM - Slides"
John Vlissides		
Stanford University							5
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ernest Wood		"SPIDER - A Bridge to Lab Operations - Slides"
Stanford University							1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Shailesh Agarwal, 	"Dynamic Global Schema Integration:
Krishna Saraswat, 	 A Framework for Semiconductor
Gio Wiederhold,		 Manufacturing Database Integration &
Ernest Wood		 Evolution - Slides"
Arthur Keller
Stanford University							3
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Plummer, Wong, 		"Manufacturing Science: The Virtual
McVittie, Ray		 Factory - The Stanford Program in 
Koehler, Wood & Goossens Semiconductor Manufacturing - Slides"
Stanford University							7
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Student Project		"Semiconductor Manufacturing Research
Summaries		 Program - Slides"
Stanford University							3
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Nicolet, Vreeland	"Properties of Si-Based Epitaxial Layers
Wang, Karumasiri	 and Superlattices - Slides"
Stanford University							1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Krishna Saraswat	"TI/AIR Force MMST Reviews: Overview
			 of the Stanford Research Program on
			 Advanced Micro Factory - Slides"
Stanford University							4
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Khuri-Yakub, Lee,	"On-Site Monitoring Techniques
Saraswat, Bhardwaj	 Using Acoustic Waves - Slides"
Stanford University							2
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Paul Losleben		"Semiconductor Manufacturing Research-
			 Background, Motivation & Overview - Slides"
Stanford University							1
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Umberto Ravaioli	"Advanced Visualizaiton Techniques for
Karl Hess		 Semiconductor Device Simulation"
Stanford University							3
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
						TOTAL			117
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
JUNE/JULY 1991 WTD STATICS

AUTHOR				TITLE				# OF REQUESTS
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Charles O'Reilly 	"Corporations, Culture, & Commitment:
			 Motivation and Social Control in 
			 Organizations"
U.C. Berkeley								22
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Barbara Berkman		"The Best and Brightest Speakout"		17
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Taylor Cox,		"Invisible Men & Women: A Status
Stella Nkomo		 Report on Race as a Variable in
			 Organizational Behavior Research"
Univ of Michigan
Univ of North Carolina							17
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Joanne Martin		"Deconstructing Organizational Taboos:
			 The Suppression of Gender Conflict in
			 Organizations"
Stanford University							31
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dorit Hochbaum &	"A Unified Approach to Approximation
David Shmoys		 Algorithms for Bottleneck Problems"
U. C. Berkeley								6
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dorit Hochbaum		"The Linzertorte Problem, or a Unified
Edna Wigderson		 Approach to Painting, Baking & Weaving"
U.C. Berkeley								3
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dorit Hochbaum		"Approximation Schemes for Covering &
Wolfgang Maass		 Packing Problems in Image Processing
			 and VLSI"
U.C. Berkeley
Univ of Illinois							5
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dorit Hochbaum		"Fast Approximation Algorithms for a
Wolfgang Maass		 Nonconvex Covering Problems"
U.C. Berkeley
Univ of Illinois							3
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Dorit Hochbaum		"Optimal Algorithms for the Allocation
			 Problems and its Extensions"
U.C. Berkeley								3
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Marko Chew		"Re-Evaluation Mode Timing Simulation"
Andrzef Strojwas
Carnegie Mellon University						3
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
						TOTAL			110
*******************************************************************************
********************************************************************************
IX.		   Automated Paper Request Form

     Below are the papers that are available from the OCTOBER/NOVEMBER 1991 
issue of WTD. Please send all requests to TENAYA::HAYES. Please include your 
mailstop and the automated paper form. DO NOT send the entire issue with your 
request at the bottom; also if you are ordering papers from past issues, you
must add issue, title and author of paper. Thanks 

	[ ] Spatial Domain Decomposition in Silicon Devices and its
	    Application to Transient Device Analysis
	[ ] Coloring and Clique Partitioning for Data Path Allocation
	[ ] Design for Manufacturability: "Good, better, best/never let
	    it rest/until my good is better/and my better best."
	[ ] Designing Bureaucracies That Work: The Case Of Engineering
	    Change Management
	[ ] Imaging Polished Sapphire With Atomic Force Microscopy
	[ ] Steady-State Analysis of RBM in a Rectangle: Numerical
	    Methods and a Queueing Application
	[ ] Process and Device Modeling
	[ ] CIS NewsLetter
	[ ] The Strategist's Role in Shortening Product Development
	[ ] How To Deal With AIDS In The Work Place
	[ ] Women Engineers A Very Rare Breed
	[ ] From Affirmative Action To Affirming Diversity
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