Share
Towards the Knowledge Society: Ecommerce, Ebusiness and Egovernment the Second Ifip Conference on E-Commerce, E-Business, E-Government (I3e 2002) Oct
Monteiro, João L. ; Swatman, Paula M. C. ; Valadares Tavares, L. (Author)
·
Springer
· Paperback
Towards the Knowledge Society: Ecommerce, Ebusiness and Egovernment the Second Ifip Conference on E-Commerce, E-Business, E-Government (I3e 2002) Oct - Monteiro, João L. ; Swatman, Paula M. C. ; Valadares Tavares, L.
Choose the list to add your product or create one New List
✓ Product added successfully to the Wishlist.
Go to My Wishlists
Origin: U.S.A.
(Import costs included in the price)
It will be shipped from our warehouse between
Tuesday, July 16 and
Tuesday, July 23.
You will receive it anywhere in United Kingdom between 1 and 3 business days after shipment.
Synopsis "Towards the Knowledge Society: Ecommerce, Ebusiness and Egovernment the Second Ifip Conference on E-Commerce, E-Business, E-Government (I3e 2002) Oct"
BE 2002 is the second in a series of conferences on eCommerce, eBusiness, and eGovemment organised by the three IFIP committees TC6, TC8, and TCll. As BE 2001 did last year in Zurich, BE 2002 continues to provide a forum for users, engineers, and researchers from academia, industry and government to present their latest findings in eCommerce, eBusiness, and eGovernment applications and the underlying technologies which support those applications. This year's conference comprises a main track with sessions on eGovernment, Trust, eMarkets, Fraud and Security, eBusiness (both B2B and B2C), the Design of systems, eLearning, Public and Health Systems, Web Design, and the Applications of and Procedures for eCommerce and eBusiness, as well as two associated Workshops (not included in these proceedings): eBusiness Models in the Digital Online Music and Online News Sectors; and eBusiness Standardisation - Challenges and Solutions for the Networked Economy. The 47 papers accepted for presentation in these sessions and published in this book of proceedings were selected from 80 submissions. They were rigorously reviewed (all papers were double-blind refereed) before being selected by the International Programme Committee. This rejection rate of almost 50% indicates just how seriously the Committee took its quality control activities.