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World Wide Web Journal, Volume 2
Volume 2, Number 1, Winter 1997
Work in Progress
- Irène Vatton:

Making a test bed for the Web. World Wide Web J. 2: 13-15 (1997) - Kimberly Amaral:

Håkon Lie: Web Stylist. World Wide Web J. 2: 15-17 (1997) - Greg Stone:

Lilly ungilded: PNG'ing true colors to the Web. World Wide Web J. 2: 18-21 (1997)
W3C Reports
- Dave Raggett:

HTML 3.2 reference specification. World Wide Web J. 2: 29-73 (1997) - Håkon Wium Lie, Bert Bos:

Cascading style sheets. World Wide Web J. 2: 75-123 (1997)
Technical Papers
- Chuck Musciano:

What's new in HTML 3.2: formalizing enhancements to HTML 2.0. World Wide Web J. 2: 127-145 (1997) - Norman Walsh:

An introduction to cascading style sheets. World Wide Web J. 2: 147-156 (1997) - Jacob Nielsen:

Guidelines for multimedia on the Web. World Wide Web J. 2: 157-162 (1997) - Keith Instone:

Usability engineering for the Web. World Wide Web J. 2: 163-171 (1997) - Mike Paciello:

People with disabilities can't access the Web! World Wide Web J. 2: 173-182 (1997) - David Flanagan:

User interfaces with HTML and JavaScript. World Wide Web J. 2: 183-192 (1997) - Richard Koman:

GIF animation. World Wide Web J. 2: 193-208 (1997) - Glenn Randers-Pehrson:

MNG: a multiple-image format in the PNG family. World Wide Web J. 2: 209-211 (1997) - Thomas P. Novak, Donna L. Hoffman:

New metrics for new media: toward the development of Web measurement standards. World Wide Web J. 2: 213-246 (1997)
Volume 2, Number 2, Spring 1997
Interview
- Dale Doherty:

Larry Wall and Tom Christiansen discuss the virtues of Perl. World Wide Web J. 2: 5-13 (1997)
Work in Progress
- Kimberly Amaral:

The "real" Web-TV: Philipp Hoschka and real-time multimedia. World Wide Web J. 2: 15-17 (1997) - Kimberly Amaral:

Collaborative authoring: Jim Whitehead and the WebDAV group. World Wide Web J. 2: 17-21 (1997)
W3C Reports
- David Raggett:

Client-side scripting and HTML. World Wide Web J. 2: 29-37 (1997) - Vincent Quint, Irène Vatton:

An introduction to Amaya. World Wide Web J. 2: 39-46 (1997) - Philipp Hoschka:

Toward synchronized multimedia on the Web. World Wide Web J. 2: 47-51 (1997)
Technical Papers
- Paul Lomax:

VBScript: active clients and servers. World Wide Web J. 2: 55-80 (1997) - Nick Heinle:

JavaScript: when HTML is not enough. World Wide Web J. 2: 81-95 (1997) - Guido van Rossum:

Scripting the Web with Python. World Wide Web J. 2: 97-120 (1997) - Mat Hostetter, David A. Kranz, Cotton Seed, Chris Terman, Stephen Ward:

Curl: a gentle slope language for the Web. World Wide Web J. 2: 121-134 (1997) - Lincoln Stein:

Exploring CGI with Perl. World Wide Web J. 2: 135-150 (1997) - Ron Petrusha:

Why Win-CGI? World Wide Web J. 2: 151-169 (1997) - Clinton Wong:

Introduction to the LWP library for Perl. World Wide Web J. 2: 171-190 (1997) - Shishir Gundavaram:

Web gateways: increasing the power of the Web. World Wide Web J. 2: 191-201 (1997) - Z. Peter Lazar, Peter Holfelder:

Web database connectivity with scripting languages. World Wide Web J. 2: 203-219 (1997)
Volume 2, Number 3, Summer 1997
Interview
- D. C. Denison:

Christine Varney: Advancing commerce and protecting consumers. World Wide Web J. 2: 3-11 (1997)
Work in Progress
- John Berry:

Rohit Khare: security maven. World Wide Web J. 2: 13-15 (1997) - Dale Dougherty, Rohit Khare:

Jim Galvin: building trust from the ground up. World Wide Web J. 2: 15-21 (1997)
W3C Reports
- Philip DesAutels, Peter Lipp, Brian A. LaMacchia, Yang-Hua Chu:

DSig 1.0 signature labels: using PICS 1.1 labels for digital signatures. World Wide Web J. 2: 29-48 (1997) - Rohit Khare:

Digital signature label architecture. World Wide Web J. 2: 49-63 (1997) - Eui-Suk Chung, Daniel Dardailler:

JEPI: joint electronic payment initiative. World Wide Web J. 2: 65-74 (1997)
Technical Papers
- Rohit Khare, Adam Rifkin:

Weaving a Web of trust. World Wide Web J. 2: 77-112 (1997) - Simson L. Garfinkel, Gene Spafford:

Cryptography and the Web. World Wide Web J. 2: 113-126 (1997) - Yang-Hua Chu, Joan Feigenbaum, Brian A. LaMacchia, Paul Resnick, Martin Strauss:

Referee: trust management for Web applications. World Wide Web J. 2: 127-139 (1997) - Frederick J. Hirsch:

Introducing SSL and certificates using SSLeay. World Wide Web J. 2: 141-173 (1997) - John Gilmore:

Security for the domain name system. World Wide Web J. 2: 175-180 (1997) - Cricket Liu:

Name server security features in BIND 4.9.5. World Wide Web J. 2: 181-185 (1997) - Simson L. Garfinkel, Gene Spafford:

Secure CGI/API programming. World Wide Web J. 2: 187-200 (1997) - Mark Madsen, Andrew Herbert:

A guide to secure electronic business using the E2S architecture. World Wide Web J. 2: 201-216 (1997) - Lincoln D. Stein:

The electronic medical record: promises and threats. World Wide Web J. 2: 217-229 (1997) - C. Bradford Biddle:

Legislating market winners: digital signature laws and the electronic commerce marketplace. World Wide Web J. 2: 231-240 (1997) - Hal Abelson, Ross J. Anderson, Steven M. Bellovin, Josh Benaloh, Matt Blaze, Whitfield Diffie, John Gilmore, Peter G. Neumann, Ronald L. Rivest, Jeffrey I. Schiller, Bruce Schneier:

The risks of key recovery, key escrow, and trusted third-party encryption. World Wide Web J. 2: 241-257 (1997) - Clint N. Smith:

Government promotion of key recovery encryption: how current government initiatives will impact Internet security. World Wide Web J. 2: 259-272 (1997)
Volume 2, Number 4, Fall 1997
- Dan Connolly:

Editorial. 1-3
- D. C. Denison:

The Road to XML: Adapting SGML to the Web. 5-12
- David Siegel:

The Web Is Ruined and I Ruined It. 13-21
- Tim Bray, Jean Paoli, C. M. Sperberg-McQueen:

Extensible Markup Language (XML). 27-66 - Tim Bray, Steven J. DeRose:

Extensible Markup Language (XML) Part 2: Linking. 67-82 - Robert R. Miner, Patrick D. F. Ion:

HTML-Math: Mathematical Markup Language Working Draft. 83-89 - Lauren Wood, Jared Sorensen:

Document Object Model Requirements. 91-94
- Norman Walsh:

A Guide to XML. 97-107 - Stuart Culshaw, Michael Leventhal, Murray Maloney:

XML and CSS. 109-118 - Dan Connolly, Rohit Khare, Adam Rifkin:

The Evolution of Web Documents: The Ascent of XML. 119-128 - Theodor Holm Nelson:

Embedded Markup Considered Harmful. 129-134 - Peter Murray-Rust:

Chemical Markup Language: A Simple Introduction to Structured Documents. 135-147 - Thomas L. Lincoln:

Codifying Medical Records in XML: Philosophy and Engineering. 149-152 - Michael Leventhal:

XML: Can the Desperate Perl Hacker Do It? 153-163 - Bert Bos:

XML: From Bytes to Characters. 165-176 - Tim Bray:

An Introduction to XML Processing with Lark. 177-186 - Jean Paoli, David Schach, Chris Lovett, Andrew Layman, Istvan Cseri:

Building XML Parsers for Microsoft's IE4. 187-195 - Peter Murray-Rust:

JUMBO: An Object-Based XML Browser. 197-206 - Rohit Khare, Adam Rifkin:

Capturing the State of Distributed Systems with XML. 207-217 - Jon Bosak:

XML, Java, and the Future of the Web. 219-227 - Charles Axel Allen:

WIDL, Application Integration with XML. 229-248

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