The editors of this bulky volume tell us that an issue of the Stanford Humanities Review ‘constituted the seed of the project that culminated in this book’ (vii). They don’t say that it was the Spring 1995 issue of that pioneering open-access e-journal, nor do they tell us how many or which of the 19 papers in this book derive from it. But since that issue is still online (as at August 28, 2006), at http://www.stanford.edu/group/SHR/4-2/text/toc.html, any reader can see that 12 of its 15 papers have been reprinted almost unaltered here, a decade later, while in addition almost all of the editors’ 1995 introduction appears again in their expanded text
In the first part of this text, I would like to describe some advantages book reviews offer. The boo...
Since 2008 Biomedical Reviews has gone online. And now its volume 20 can be viewed on your desktop, ...
Is computational a dead linguistics; review of "Collected Papers of Martin Kay: A Half-Century of Co...
The editors of this bulky volume tell us that an issue of the Stanford Humanities Review ‘constitute...
Book review of Stefano Franchi and Güven Güzeldere, eds. 'Mechanical Bodies, Computational Minds: Ar...
Is computational a dead linguistics; review of "Collected Papers of Martin Kay: A Half-Century ...
As the pluralization in the title of MITECS suggests, and as many reviewers have noted, the stance t...
It may be difficult to imagine that almost half a century ago we used computers far less sophisticat...
Fifteen years ago we published an article in Solstice: An Electronic Journal of Geography and Mathe...
The quotes on this book's cover from eminent figures do indeed reflect its contribution as a compend...
This is not the first time Living Reviews in Relativity has appeared in the Journal of Electronic Pu...
The short editorial introduces to the new issue of the Review. Startgin from the 2015 volume, the jo...
It is often stated that trying to deal with information on the internet is like drinking from a fire...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136505/1/ejn13531_am.pdfhttps://deepbl...
Review of Machado, Romero and Greenfield (editors): Artificial intelligence and the arts Download...
In the first part of this text, I would like to describe some advantages book reviews offer. The boo...
Since 2008 Biomedical Reviews has gone online. And now its volume 20 can be viewed on your desktop, ...
Is computational a dead linguistics; review of "Collected Papers of Martin Kay: A Half-Century of Co...
The editors of this bulky volume tell us that an issue of the Stanford Humanities Review ‘constitute...
Book review of Stefano Franchi and Güven Güzeldere, eds. 'Mechanical Bodies, Computational Minds: Ar...
Is computational a dead linguistics; review of "Collected Papers of Martin Kay: A Half-Century ...
As the pluralization in the title of MITECS suggests, and as many reviewers have noted, the stance t...
It may be difficult to imagine that almost half a century ago we used computers far less sophisticat...
Fifteen years ago we published an article in Solstice: An Electronic Journal of Geography and Mathe...
The quotes on this book's cover from eminent figures do indeed reflect its contribution as a compend...
This is not the first time Living Reviews in Relativity has appeared in the Journal of Electronic Pu...
The short editorial introduces to the new issue of the Review. Startgin from the 2015 volume, the jo...
It is often stated that trying to deal with information on the internet is like drinking from a fire...
Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/136505/1/ejn13531_am.pdfhttps://deepbl...
Review of Machado, Romero and Greenfield (editors): Artificial intelligence and the arts Download...
In the first part of this text, I would like to describe some advantages book reviews offer. The boo...
Since 2008 Biomedical Reviews has gone online. And now its volume 20 can be viewed on your desktop, ...
Is computational a dead linguistics; review of "Collected Papers of Martin Kay: A Half-Century of Co...