Latest Update: April 19, 1999

Past GBC/ACM Meetings for 1998-1999

Jini

Charles Lamb of Sun
Thursday, April 15, 1999
6:30 pm Refreshments, 7:00 pm presentation.
GTE Internetworking (formerly BBN), Cambridge

Web Design

Panel Discussion
6:15 pm Refreshments, 6:30 pm presentation.
Thursday, March 25, 1999
Marcam Corp., Newton
Joint meeting with IEEE/CS

E-Commerce, E-Business...E-Gads!

Jim Belfiore
Netscape Communications, Inc.
6:30 refreshments, 7:00 pm presentation.
Thursday, February 18, 1999
BBN (GTE Internetworking), Cambridge

Code Inspections

Benson Margulies
Basis Technology
6:30 refreshments, 7:00 pm presentation.
Thursday, January 21, 1999
BBN (GTE Internetworking), Cambridge

Designing Systems for Internet Commerce

Lawrence C. Stewart and G. Winfield Treese
Open Market, Inc.
6:30 refreshments, 7:00 pm presentation.
Thursday, December 17, 1998
BBN (GTE Internetworking), Cambridge

Practical UML -- A Process to Make It Work

Else-Marie Ostling, President, BIRKA Group, Inc.
6:30 pm
Thursday, November 19, 1998
BBN, Cambridge
Note: Joint Meeting with IEEE Computer Society

XML and Distributed Web Applications

Jeremy Allaire, Allaire Corp.
Thursday, September 24, 1998
Hynes Convention Center
 

Return to GBC/ACM Home Page.
See upcoming GBC/ACM Meetings for the 1998-1999 season.
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See past GBC/ACM Meetings for the 1996-1997 season.


Meeting Details

April, 1999 Meeting

Subject

Jini

Speaker

Charles Lamb
Sun

Date

Thursday, April 15, 1999

Time

Meeting starts at 6:30 pm with informal discussion and light refreshments. Presentation begins at 7:00 pm.

Location

GTE Internetworking (formerly BBN), Fawcett Street, Cambridge
See below for directions.

Meeting Overview

The Jini technology is designed to make it easy to deploy and use services in a network. When you plug in a device it just works--no drivers to install.

This talk will cover the Jini architecture, what it does, and how it does it. More information is available at http://www.sun.com/jini/.

Speaker Biography

Charles Lamb is one of the key developers at Sun's Burlington Research Labs.


Web Design

Panel Discussion
6:15 pm Refreshments, 6:30 pm presentation.
Thursday, March 25, 1999
Marcam Corp., Newton

Return to GBC/ACM Home Page.
See past GBC/ACM Meetings for the 1998-1999 season.
See past GBC/ACM Meetings for the 1997-1998 season.
See past GBC/ACM Meetings for the 1996-1997 season.


Meeting Details

March, 1999 Meeting

Subject

Panel Discussion:
Usability Experts Discuss Web Design
or
Why Do Good People Create Bad Web Sites?

Joint Meeting with IEEE Computer Society

Panel Members

Date

Thursday, March 25, 1999

Time

Meeting starts at 6:15 PM with coffee. Presentation begins at 6:30 PM.

Location

Marcam Corporation, 95 Wells Avenue, Newton
See below for directions.

Meeting Overview

The web is presenting us with an explosion of information, economic opportunity, and modes of communication few people could have conceived of just five years ago. However, for this opportunity to be fully realized, web sites must be designed with the end user in mind. Will users be able to find the information they seek? Will they have the confidence to complete the transactions you would like them to complete? Will they find the site useful enough, compelling enough, to keep coming back?

This panel discussion brings together four software usability experts who have considerable experience working on issues such as these. They will show you examples of good and bad web design, and explain the underlying usability principles that can be applied to achieve superior results. They will share with us real life situations and practical, useful techniques to create better focused, more enjoyable, and more useful web sites.

One common problem encountered in web site design relates to navigation systems - simple mechanisms for helping users find their way around. The panel will discuss navigation systems that work, as well as some that have confused users. Another common problem involves knowing whether or not your real live users are able to accomplish what they want to accomplish at your site. The panel will present success stories where companies found out for certain what the real issues were for their users. To conclude, the panel will discuss how visual design and information hierarchies help create well focused web sites.

The panel will also seek questions from the audience. Join us for what promises to be a lively and informative evening!

Directions to Marcam

Marcam Corporation
95 Wells Avenue
Newton, MA

Take Route 128 to the Highland Avenue, Needham exit (the Muzi Ford exit). Turn left at the first light onto Hunting Road. Turn left at the first light onto Kendrick Street. Cross over 128, turn right at the first light onto Wells Avenue. Go about 0.2 miles to Marcam Corporation on the right side of the road at 95 Wells Avenue. Enter the building at 85 Wells Avenue, in the middle of the back of the building, as this is the closest entrance to the auditorium.


February, 1999 Meeting

Subject

E-Commerce, E-Business...E-Gads!
A discussion of current and future
Internet commerce technologies and markets

Speaker

Jim Belfiore
Netscape Communications, Inc.

Date

Thursday, February 18, 1999

Time

Meeting starts at 6:30 PM with refreshments. Presentation begins at 7:00 PM.

Location

GTE Internetworking, formerly Bolt Beranek and Newman (BBN) in Cambridge.
See below for details.

Meeting Overview

In the early 1990's, the unconventional thinking was that the Internet would lose its status as a tool of academia and become a commercial sales and commerce channel that eclipsed the conventional marketplace.  In 1999, we're well passed the point of no return towards that once unconventional day.  What lies ahead?  What technologies will advance the accessibility of e-commerce? How will businesses need to change to leverage these technologies?  What markets might emerge, or disappear as the desktop becomes the primary point-of-sale for a majority of consumers and businesses?  Our speaker will present one view of the current e-commerce technology and business landscape,
and lead the audience in an open forum about issues concerning these technologies.

Speaker Biography

Jim Belfiore is a Project Executive for Netscape Professional Services, where he leads consulting engagements at financial, state, and corporate institutions throughout New England and New York.  Jim has been very active in Internet technology throughout his career. Before joining Netscape, Jim had been responsible for the architecture, design, and deployment of major Internet services for News Corporation including TV Guide and FOX News, as well as large-scale subscription and payment services for British Telecom and News
International.  Jim has spoken numerous times for GBC/ACM on Internet technologies and futures.


January, 1999 Meeting

Subject

Code Inspections

Speaker

Benson Margulies
Vice-President and Chief Technology Officer
Basis Technology

Date

Thursday, January 21, 1999

Time

Meeting starts at 6:30 PM with refreshments. Presentation begins at 7:00 PM. LocationGTE Internetworking, formerly Bolt Beranek and Newman (BBN) in Cambridge.
See below for details.

Meeting Overview

Code inspection is often discussed as a software quality or software process technique. Many people think of it as part of a large, bureaucratic process in which code passes through many steps and many hands before it sees the light of day. Developers, and even managers, often think of it as a waste of time imposed on them by some "quality process" (e.g. ISO-9000) rather than as an effective tool for solving or preventing problems.

Performance problems present themselves as fire drills. You have a choice. You and your development group can join the Keystone Kops, or you can stop, take a deep breath, and apply an organized process to the problem. Code inspection, combined with an appropriate methodology for gathering data and performing experiments, can be a powerful part of that process. In that process, you and your group can learn to treat performance as a central part of the product's quality, and apply those lessons to solving problems before they escape to the field and come back around to bite you.

Speaker Biography

Benson Margulies is the Vice President and CTO of Basis Technology. He has been in the engineering and engineering management trenches of software development for many years. His experience ranges from secure operating system development on Multics to Object Oriented Database design and implementation at Object Design to model-based SQL access for the Web.


December, 1998 Meeting

Subject

Designing Systems for Internet Commerce

Speakers

Lawrence C. Stewart and
G. Winfield Treese
Open Market, Inc.

Date

Thursday, December 17, 1998

Time

Meeting starts at 6:30 PM with refreshments. Presentation begins at 7:00 PM. LocationGTE Internetworking, formerly Bolt Beranek and Newman (BBN) in Cambridge.
See below for details.

Meeting Overview

Internet commerce is no longer advanced technology for visionaries: it is a necessary part of almost any business strategy. As a consequence, systems for Internet commerce must meet a wide range of requirements for marketing, sales, and customer service, yet also meet the security and technology challenges of the Internet. This talk will touch on Internet business strategy, then discuss some of the architectural, security, and transaction processing requirements of Internet commerce.

Speaker Biographies

Dr. Lawrence Stewart is Chief Scientist and one of the founders of Open Market, Inc., a Massachusetts software company focused on Internet Commerce. He has been responsible for the company's product architecture and technology since the company began operations in 1994.

G. Winfield Treese is Corporate Systems Architect at Open Market, Inc., and one of its first employees. He has worked on a broad range of Open Market's products, with a special focus on security for commerce applications. He is also chair of the IETF Working Group on Transport Layer Security (TLS) and the 8th USENIX Security Symposium.

Stewart and Treese are co-authors of the book Designing Systems for Internet Commerce.

More information about Open Market can be found at http://www.openmarket.com/.

November, 1998 Meeting

Subject

Practical UML -- A Process to Make It Work

Speaker

Else-Marie Ostling
President
BIRKA Group, Inc.

Date

Thursday, November 24, 1998

Time

6:30 pm

Location

GTE Internetworking (formerly BBN), Cambridge MA
See below for directions.

Meeting Overview

Now that UML (Unified Markup Language) has been selected as the industry standard for object and component modeling, how do we make use of it? This is what many designers/developers ask themselves today. Having struggled along for years without a modeling standard, many in the object/component field are now questioning if UML is really the answer. Reading the UML spec, or the plethora of books on the subject, does not seem to alleviate this problem. The missing piece in this puzzle is a process. A process that tells us where to start, what parts of UML to use when, and more importantly what deliverables to produce along the way to ensure that we build a robust design/architecture for our application. This is why many authors, including the creators of UML, are currently focusing on puting something in print about a process. For example, the authors of UML (Booth, Jacobson and Rumbaugh) are adding the finishing touches to The Unified Process, which will be released by the end of the year.

This talk will cover an introduction to UML -- what it is and what it is not. It also will present a practical process that defines how the UML notations can be used and extended, to successfully design and implement component-based business applications. A common problem when embarking on your first UML project is to use an all or nothing approach to it. In this talk we will also discuss the benefits of each notation, what it can be used for, when it is appropriate to use, and when it can be left out. The talk will also provide an overview of the design and development tools available in the marketplace today that support UML.

Speaker Biography

Ms. Else-Marie Ostling is President and Chief Technologist at BIRKA Group, Inc., where some of her responsibilities include development of the Practical UML (TM) process, BIRKA's process for software development, as well as providing mentoring, training and strategic technology consulting to the company's customers. Ms. Ostling specializes in mentoring and knowledge transfer of object-oriented modeling, architecture, and application development, and has worked with a wide variety of client organizations in the United States, Canada, Europe, and Asia. She has over 15 years of experience in methods and process development, with an emphasis on object technology. Ms. Ostling is a frequent speaker at conferences and seminars all over the world. A few of the previous positions held by Ms. Ostling include Vice President of Customer Services at Riverton Software Corporation, Vice President of Professional Services at Objectory Corporation (now Rational Corporation), and Regional Manager of Implementation Services at Index Technology Corporation. Ms. Ostling holds a BS degree in Computer Science (with a major in Methodology) from Upsala University in Sweden.


September, 1998 Meeting

Subject

XML and Distributed Web Applications

Speaker

Jeremy Allaire
Vice-President of Technology
Allaire Corporation

Date

Thursday, September 24, 1998

Time

7:30 - 8:30 pm

Location

Room 110, Hynes Convention Center, Boston MA

Note: The meeting will not be held in the usual location in Cambridge. The meeting will be held in conjunction with the Web'98 Conference. If you are not registered for the conference, bring a copy of this announcement and mention code BASOI31 to gain admission to the meeting area and exhibits.

Meeting Overview

The Web is rapidly moving into its next phase as a computing platform.  Shifting from an isolated model where Web browsers and Web application servers are islands of data, to a rich distributed model where every node on the network becomes a leverage point for every other node.  Driven by the requirements of the new Internet Economy, XML will play a central in forming the glue between disparate systems and nodes on this network.  Jeremy will discuss this emerging landscape, and provide insight into an XML-based model that Allaire is developing for
building distributed Web applications across any Web language or platform.

Speaker Biography

Jeremy Allaire is a principal & director of technology strategy at Allaire Corp.  As VP of Technology, Jeremy spearheads the company's future product direction and is responsible for establishing key strategic partnerships within the Internet industry.

Jeremy has been a regular author and analyst on Internet technologies for the past seven years.


Additional Information on Meetings

Unless noted otherwise, all GBC/ACM meetings are held in the Newman Auditorium at GTE Internetworking (formerly Bolt Beranek and Newman), 70 Fawcett Street, Cambridge, MA.

The meeting is free and open to the public. No reservations are required.

Everyone is invited for light refreshments and informal discussion from 6:30 to 7:00 PM. The formal part of the meeting will start at 7:00 PM.

Directions to Bolt Beranek and Newman (BBN)

Recorded directions: (617) 873-4567

Driving

From Route 128, Lexington: Take Route 2 inbound. The four-lane highway narrows to two lanes near Route 16. At the traffic light bear right onto Alewife Brook Parkway. Proceed past shopping centers to the Fresh Pond Rotary. Take the first right onto Concord Avenue. Fawcett Street is one block down Concord Avenue, on the right.

From the Mass. Pike: Take the Pike inbound to the Cambridge/Allston exit. Exit onto the Cambridge offramp and take Cambridge Street. Turn left onto either Storrow or Memorial Drive. (Storrow Drive is on the Boston side of the Charles River and Memorial Drive is on the Cambridge side.) Follow the Storrow and Memorial Drive directions below.

From Storrow and Memorial Drives: Take Storrow or Memorial Drive west; follow signs to Routes 2, 3, 16. Remain on Route 2. The road will become narrow and winding. This is the Fresh Pond Parkway. You will pass several car dealerships and Fresh Pond Seafood on your right. At the first rotary, take the third right onto Concord Avenue. You will then come to a second rotary (the Fresh pond Rotary). Continue straight through this rotary (stay on Concord Avenue). Fawcett Street is one block down Concord Avenue, on the right.

Once on Fawcett Street, 70 Fawcett Street (the BBN building containing Newman Auditorium) is on the right side of Fawcett Street, about 1/2 block from Concord Avenue. Park in the lot on the right side of the street; the lot is immediately before, and adjacent to, the 70 Fawcett Street building. If full, park in the lot across Fawcett Street.

Via Public Transit

Take the T to Harvard Square. From Harvard Square take the Concord Ave./Belmont Center bus. Get off at Fawcett Street.