Compiled by the PARC Information Center
This is a list of recent news and magazine articles that discuss Xerox PARC history, projects, and people. It does not include research articles, books, or reports by PARC scientists.
We regret we do not have copyright permission and cannot provide you with web or paper versions of these articles.
To Dream the Invisible Dream.
Red Herring, July 1998, p. 134 .
John Seely Brown
(PARC director explains why new technologies need to be invisible.)
As Innovation Slows, Software Companies Pile on Features.
Wall Street Journal, June 25, 1998, p. A1.
Lee Gomes
(Computer software innovations come slowly now, unlike the early days at Xerox PARC.)
Fans Celebrate Fallen Xerox Star.
Los Angeles Times, June 22, 1998.
Michael A. Hiltzik
(The legendary, pioneering Xerox Star of 1981 is shown at Computer Museum History Center event at Xerox PARC.)
Xerox Star Gives Final Show.
Palo Alto Daily News, June 18, 1998, p. 3.
Brian Bothun
(The legendary, pioneering Xerox Star of 1981 is shown at Computer Museum History Center event at Xerox PARC.)
Star Creators Do the Time Warp.
ZDNet News, June 18, 1998.
Lisa M. Bowman
(800 people attend last formal presentation of 1981 Xerox Star.)
Dense Arrays May Lead to High-Resolution Printers.
Laser Focus World, June 1998.
Yvonne Carts-Powell
(Dense arrays of vertical-cavity surface-emitting lasers have been developed by PARC physicists and should lead to faster, cheaper laser printers.)
Xerox PARC Joins In.
The Industrial Physicist, June 1998.
Angela Putney
(Xerox PARC joins the American Institute of Physics Corporate Associates.)
No More Flubs.
San Francisco Chronicle, June 5, 1998, p. D1.
Jamie Beckett
(Xerox profiting from PARC innovations through spinoffs of Xerox New Enterprises.)
Future Nerd.
Slate, May 27, 1998
Michael Lewis
(Ralph Merkle sees no payoffs for molecular nanotechnology for 10 or more years.)
A Walk in the PARC
Computerworld, May 18, 1998, p. 73.
Gary H. Anthes
(Xerox PARC aiming to shape the future of computing as InXight Software Inc. commercializes some PARC innovations.)
Machines that Think in Sync.
Upside, May, 1998, p.56.
Robert Buderi
(Project leader Gregor Kiczales explains that modular Aspect-Oriented Programming will simplify programming in massively distributed systems.)
Seeing Differently: A Role for Pioneering Research.
Research Technology Management, May/June 1998, p. 24.
John Seely Brown
(The challenge for pioneering research is to combine invention with innovation and create business value in unexplored areas between disciplines.)
Field Work in the Tribal Office.
Technology Review, May/June 1998, p.42.
Robert Buderi
(PARC anthropologists study how knowledge is created and used in the workplace and how it affects the ways work gets done.)
Desktopless Computing.
Compressed Air, April/May 1998, p. 30.
Jim Morrison
(Samll computers called PARC Tabs and PARC Pads help bring the vision of ubiquitous computing nearer to everyday life.)
Managing for Knowledge.
CIO Canada, April 1998, p. 38.
Scott Frame
(PARC social scientists study "workscapes" and help in the development of software which, in the words of Brigitte Jordan, will "manage for knowledge.")
Smart Matter Program Embeds Intelligence by Combining Sensing, Actuation, and Computation:
Xerox Builds on Sensor Theory for Smart Materials.
Electronic Engineering Times, March 23, 1998, p. 129.
Brian Santo
(Andy Berlin, John Gilbert, and Feng Zhao are creating bridges between computer science and smart matter in the search to create machines that think.)
Cyber Paradise.
WE Magazine, March-April 1998, p. 66.
Charles A. Riley II
(Scientists at PARC set people with disabilities on track.)
The Next Big Idea.
New Yorker, February 23 & March 2, 1998, p. 78.
John Heilemann
(Early PARC years mentioned in piece on Interval Research.)
Microscopic Revolution Coalesces in Materials.
Signal, the official publication of AFCEA, February 1998, p. 31.
Robert K. Ackerman
(PARC scientist Andrew Berlin explains thrust of PARC 2000 program on smart matter.)
The Case of Xerox PARC.
Strategy & Business, First Quarter 1998, p. 76.
John Holusha
(Xerox New Enterprise companies emerge from PARC.)
Riding on a Sea of Calm.
World Link, January/February 1998, p. 48.
Mark Weiser and John Seely Brown
(Calm technology will help fit ubiquitous computing into our lives.)
Here, There and Everywhere.
San Jose Mercury News, January 6, 1998, p. 1F.
Reprinted in Chicago Tribune, February 19, 1998.
Elizabeth Wasserman
(Mark Weiser, PARC's chief technologist, describes a future with computers embedded in everyday objects.)
Creating a Community.
Wall Street Journal, November 17, 1997, p. R10.
Lisa Bannon
(Xerox PARC, Phoenix College, and Longview Elementary create an experimental virtual community.)
Performing Live - with a Net.
San Jose Mercury News, November 15, 1997.
Elizabeth Wasserman
(Severe Tire Damage was the first rock band to broadcast live music and video over the Internet a few years ago; drummer is PARC's Mark Weiser.)
All the World's a Page.
Compressed Air, October/November 1997.
Cathy Handley
(PARC scientist Nicholas Sheridon discusses Gyricon display technology.)
U.S. and Japan Are in a Race on Laser Breakthrough.
San Jose Mercury News, October 28, 1997, p. 1C.
(PARC scientists build a blue laser diode that will greatly improve the resolution of today's laser printers.)
A Race to Catch a Japanese Star on Blue Lasers.
New York Times, October 27, 1997, p. C1.
John Markoff
(Blue laser technology developed at PARC is announced today.)
A Race to Catch a Japanese Star on Blue Lasers.
New York Times, October 27, 1997, p. C1.
John Markoff
(Blue laser technology developed at PARC is announced today.)
Xerox Develops Diode That Could Lead to Laser Printers with Sharper Images.
Wall Street Journal, October 27, 1997, p. B6.
Naju Narisetti
(Xerox PARC now has a diode that produces blue laser beams.)
Storms Brewing on the Internet Horizon.
PC Week, October 13, 1997, p. 98.
Jeff Moad
(Interview with Bernardo Huberman, who studies congestion on the Internet.)
Xerox Won't Duplicate Past Errors
Business Week, September 29, 1997, p. 18.
Otis Port
(PARC research more important than ever for Xerox' increasingly digital products. PARC ideas are also used in Xerox New Enterprises companies.)
Live from Sunset Boulevard.
Wired, August 1997, p.43.
Colin Berry
(PARC artists-in-residence create "Sunset: 200 MHz in a 35 MPH Zone.")
Model Explains Internet 'Storms'.
Science, July 25, 1997, p. 477.
Charles Seife
(Bernardo Huberman's and Rajan Lukose's mathematical models explain congestion on the Internet. Their article "Social Dilemmas and Internet Congestion" appears in this issue of Science.)
From Microdevice to Smart Dust.
Science News, July 26, 1997, p. 62.
Ivars Peterson
(Andrew Berlin discusses micromechanical devices with sensing, computation, and communication capabilities.)
Internet Traffic Jams Due to Flat-Rate Hogs.
San Jose Mercury News, July 25, 1997, p. 1C.
Elizabeth Wasserman
(Bernardo Huberman and Rajan Lakose argue for actual use pricing model for the Net.)
Researchers Seek Ways to Shelter Users from Internet 'Storms.'
New York Times CyberTimes, July 25, 1997.
Elizabeth Weiser
(Bernardo Huberman and Rajan Lakose study congestion on the Internet.)
This Man is Turning His Company Upside down.
Convergence, Summer 1997.
Jennifer L. Schenker
(Eureka project, which taps photocopier tech reps' expertise, led by PARC researcher Olivier Raiman is now being deployed on Xerox/Rank Xerox intranet.)
A Walk in the PARC.
Red Herring, July 1997, p. 53.
Deborah Claymon
(PARC hatches new ventures through Xerox New Enterprises as well as into Xerox' core businesses.)
Postmodern PARC.
Red Herring, June 1997, p. 28.
Deborah Claymon
(John Seely Brown discusses documents and social computing.)
Demain, le document.
Reproduire & Impression, June-July 1997, p. 16-17.
Raphael Ducos.
(John Seely Brown describes document research at PARC.)
For Scientists at Xerox PARC, Future Is Now.
Computing Canada, April 14, 1997.
Paul Barker
(John Seely Brown and Mark Weiser envision new computing technologies that will provide connectivity and calmness.)
In His Book, the Printed Word Will Live On.
Los Angeles Times, April 21, 1997.
Mary Purpura and Paolo Pontoniere.
(Interview with Geoffrey Nunberg on the future of the book.)
Brainstorming the Future.
Fast Company, April/May 1997.
(PARC and FXPAL's Workspace of the Future summer program with technologically innovative teenagers.)
A Glimpse inside Technology Central.
Richard Morochove
The Toronto Star, April 3, 1997, p. J1.
(Interview with John Seely Brown.)
The Art of the High-Tech Spinoff.
The Globe and Mail, April 2, 1997.
Geoffrey Rowan.
(The Xerox New Enterprise Charter develops and commercializes promising technologies from PARC but outside of Xerox's core area.)
Visionaries See Invisible Computing.
The Globe and Mail, April 1, 1997.
Geoffrey Rowan.
(PARC researchers predict smart materials with computational capabilities; ubiquitous computing and calm technology also discussed.)
Xerox Makes New Attempt to Duplicate Research Triumphs.
San Francisco Business Times, March 31, 1997.
(PARC spins off InXight through New Enterprises Board; PARC research in Internet area.)
Making Something Out of Nothing.
Newsweek, March 31, 1997, p. 14.
Adam Rogers
(PARC researcher Ralph Merkle quoted in article on nanotechnology.)
Physics, Computers Collide in Xerox's Vision.
The Financial Post, March 27, 1997.
Amanda Lane
(Interview with PARC Director John Seely Brown, regarding diffuse computing and PARC.)
Falling into Place
Louis Trager
San Francisco Examiner, March 23, 1997, p. B1.
(A behind the scenes look at PARC spinoff PlaceWare Inc.)
Xerox Takes Interfaces into a Third Dimension.
Lynda Radosevich
Infoworld, March 17, 1997, p. 47.
(PARC spinoff InXight delivers User Interface components called VizControls.)
Less [Intrusion] Is More [Useful].
Mark Weiser and John Seely Brown
Computerworld, February 17, 1997, p. 81.
(Calm technology to assist ubiquitous computing by moving from the periphery to the center and back.)
The Techno-Gospel According to Mark.
Nicholas Booth
The Times of London, January 29, 1997, p. 1.
(Interview with Mark Weiser, proponent of the ubiquitous computer.)
Next Wave in High Tech: Tiny Motors and Sensors.
John Markoff
New York Times, January 27, 1997, p. A1.
(Research on micro-electro-mechanical systems, called MEMS, headed by PARC scientist Andrew Berlin is discussed.)
Browser Hailed as New Wave.
Elizabeth Wasserman
San Jose Mercury News, January 14, 1997, p. C1.
(Hyperbolic tree browser providing graphical visualization of web links is based on PARC technology and becomes product of new company InXight.)
Hedging Bets on Hard Problems.
Charles Seife
Science, January 3, 1997, p. 33.
(PARC scientists Bernardo Huberman and Tadd Hogg speed up computer performance through use of algorithm portfolios.)
The Internet Needs Technological Innovation and Social Transformation
Edward Rothstein
New York Times, October 28, 1996, p. 4.
(Discussion with PARC principal scientist Mark Stefik, author of new book Internet Dreams.)
Xerox PARC Has New Tech Leader.
Examiner News Services
San Francisco Examiner, August 15, 1996, p. B-1.
(Mark Weiser has been named PARC's Chief Technologist)
Political Webwatch: Conceptual Art Team Goes On-Line to Create an Un-`Conventional' Presidential Campaign Project.
David Bonetti
San Francisco Examiner, August 7, 1996, p. C1.
(PARC Artists in Residence Margaret Crane and Jon Winet are working with scientists Scott Minneman and Dale McDonald to create an interactive Web site.)
Free Long-Distance Phone Calls! (Multimedia Computer, Modem, Software and Internet Connection Extra.)
Peter H. Lewis
New York Times, August 5, 1996, p. B1.
(Carl Malamud from MIT, pioneer in the use of audio and video on the Internet and Steve Deering at PARC communicate via Internet phone calls.)
The Elements of Design: An Inside View of How Innovative Individuals Produce Technology Breakthroughs.
Tom Thompson
Byte, August 1996, p. 81.
(Dan Huttenlocher describes how he followed a hunch to solve the problem of getting computers to isolate and recognize an object on a cluttered background.)
Sometimes it is not what developers know, but what developers ask.
Heather Clancy
Computer Reseller News, p.61, July 29, 1996.
(PARC technologies from the past and the future are mentioned, and PARC is given credit for "asking the right questions".)
Microsoft Sees a Major Shift for Computers.
John Markoff
New York Times, July 22, 1996, p. A1.
(John Seely Brown comments on Microsoft's new metaphor and says it will simplify the way we deal with documents.)
George Pake "Proved That Physicists Can Be Anything."
Teresa Sokol Thomas.
Carnegie Mellon Magazine, Summer 1996, p. 32.
(Interview with George Pake about his career in science.)
Can Xerox Auction Off Hot Air? Room Temperature in the Digital Age.
John Markoff
New York Times, June 24, 1996.
(Bernardo Huberman and Scott Clearwater have created a software based system that holds digital mini-auctions to distribut hot and cold air through buildings.)
Robert M. Metcalfe: As Good at Selling as Producing Ideas, Ethernet's Inventor Has Been Awarded the 1996 IEEE Medal of Honor.
William Sweet
IEEE Spectrum, June 1996, p. 49.
(Profile of Bob Metcalfe that describes his work at PARC.)
Xerox PARC DataGlyph Technology Helps SCICOM Add Value to Large Mailroom Operations.
MAIL: The Journal of Communication Distribution, June 1996, p. 49.
(A look at how useful Dataglyphs are in mailrooms.)
Triumph of the Nerds: an Irreverent History of the PC Industry.
Bob Cringely
Videotapes by Ambrose Video Publishing
(Several past and present PARC scientists are profiled or quoted.)
SID Reflects LCD Revolution.
David Lieberman
Electronic Engineering Times, May 6, 1996, p.33-34.
(Mentions work done by Greg Crawford which was published in the 1995 Color Imaging Conference and presented at SID '96.)
A softer technology : Xerox chief scientist seeks 'a sense of calmness'.
Leslie Sopko
Democrat and Chronicle, Rochester, N.Y., p.4B-8B, May 1,1996.
(Interview with John Seely Brown.)
Waiting for Breakthroughs (Trends in Nanotechnology.)
Gary Stix
Scientific American, April 1996, p. 94.
Response to this article.
(Ralph Merkle has articulated a vision of a society transformed by machines that can construct objects by moving single atoms and molecules.)
Making Computers Sociable (Famous Lab Redesigns Itself to Give Tech a Human Face.)
Daniel S. Levine
San Francisco Business Times, Week of March 15-21, 1996, p 2A.
(John Seely Brown describes how PARC is paying more attention to putting technology in the context of real work being done by real people.)
Xerox PARC Takes on Replication Conundrum.
Barb Cole
Network World, March 11, 1996, p. 77.
(PARC's Bayou project is aimed at making it easier for mobile users to synchronize their personal databases with databases on corporate servers. Doug Terry is quoted.)
Xerox PARC in dpiX Spin-Off.
Andrew MacLellan
Electronic News, March 11, 1996, p. 4.
Xerox Enters the World of Flat-Panel Displays.
David Einstein
San Francisco Chronicle, March 11, 1996, p. B2.
(dpiX spinoff is described.)
Xerox Spin-Off Dpix to Make Flat Panel Computer Screens.
Lee Gomes
San Jose Mercury News, March 11, 1996.
The Scientist and his Glyphs.
Bob Parks
Wired, p.54, March 1996.
(David Hecht's work on Dataglyphs is described.)
Invisible Computers.
Jim Morrison
Spirit (Southwest Airlines), March 1996, p. 78
(Marvin Theimer, Roy Want, Mark Weiser and Bob Bauer describe Ubiquitous Computing projects at PARC and the theory behind them.)
Flat-Panel Industry to go on Display Monday.
Dean Takahashi
San Joe Mercury News, 1D-2D, February 3, 1996.
(Malcolm Thompson comments on the market for flat panels.)
Refuge For Parents : New Palo Alto Library offers resources on family matters.
Don Brignolo
San Jose Mercury News, p.1B-2B, January 30, 1996.
(The Parent Resource Center in Palo Alto was made possible by a $20,500 grant from Xerox.)
Copy Cat: John Seely Brown Lives on the Frontier of the Digital Age.
Evan Soloman
Shift, November/December 1995, p. 36.15
(Interview with John Seely Brown.)
Helfer auf Schritt und Tritt
Stern, October 19, 1995, p. 144.
(Article on Ubiquitious Computing.)
The Future of the Document?
Glenn Rifkin
Forbes ASAP, October 9, 1995, p. 42.
(Mark Weiser and Roy Want describe Ubicomp technology.)
Asyst Joins FPD field with Xerox deal.
Electronic News, October 9, 1995, p. 60.
(Asyst Technologies and PARC will develop a material handling system for advanced flat panel display manufacturing.)
Playground of invention : Xerox PARC forges ahead with research.
Susan Moran
San Francisco Examiner, September 15, 1995 p. B1.
(On the occasion of PARC's 25th anniversary, a look at PARC.)
Who and What Made PARC an Industry Legend.
Julie Pitta
Los Angeles Times, September 13, 1995, p. D4.
(On the occastion of PARC's 25th anniversary, Gordon Bell, Bob Metcalfe, Chuck Geschke, Bob Taylor, Butler Lampson, Bob Spinrad and Charles Irby are quoted about PARC technology.)
Homers, Out of the PARC.
Elizabeth Corcoran.
Washington Post, September 13, 1995, p. F1.
(A historical look at PARC's many contributions to technology.)
For Japan, innovation starts in U.S.
Micheal Zielenziger
San Jose Mercury News, September 3, 1995, p. D1.
(Fuji Xerox has set up a new research arm at PARC.)
Reinventing the PC.
Fred Guterl
Discover, September 1995.
(A look back at pioneering work at PARC in the 70's.)
Upgrading the Internet.
John A. Adams
IEEE Spectrum, September, 1995.
(Extensive software improvements are coming to the world's computer network. Steve Deering and Lixia Zhang take part in a panel discussion.)
Perspectives on Broadband Network Technologies and Applications.
Christine Perey
New Telecom Quarterly, 2Q95, p. 35.
(A look at PARC's technologies underlying ATM switching. Brian Lyles is quoted.)
Fuji Xerox copying local PARC.
Michele Hostetler
IAC INSTITUTE, The Business Journal, June 26, 1996.
(Fuji Xerox has estblished a new lab similar to PARC.)
The MUD flies in LambdaMOO's world
Howard Bryant
The Argus, The Review, The Tribune, The Hearld, The Times-Star, April 23, 1995.
(LambdaMOO and Worlds Away are described. Mike Dixon is quoted.)
Whither the Net, When It's Pay-As-You-Go?
Peter Coy
Business Week, April 3, 1995, p. 122.
(Steve Deering and Scott Shenker give their opinions about financing Internet usage.)
Computing for the People.
Debra Feinstein
Fast Company, p. 83-84, Premiere Issue, c.April 1995
(Social computing turns into a cyberplace. Pavel Curtis describes Jupiter.)
Tomorrow's Technology Takes Shape at Xerox PARC.
Howard Bryant
Oakland Tribune, March 26, p. D1.
(David Hecht and Roy Want describe Dataglyphs and some Ubicomp projects.)
Alone Together: Will Being Wired Set Us Free?
Andrew Kupfer
Fortune, March 20, 1995, p. 94.
(Mark Weiser discusses how our attitudes change as we adopt new technologies.)
You're Not Really Paranoid: They Really Are Watching.
John Whalen
Wired, March 1995, p. 76.
(Roy Want comments on the risks and benefits of technology.)
MBones and Giganets.
Sharon Begley and Adam Rogers
Newsweek, February 27, 1995, p. 58.
(Steve Deering helped invent the MBone, carrier of voice, data and video.)
Conquering the Computer Connection: Industry Searches High and Low for the Perfect User Interface.
Tom Forenski
San Francisco Examiner, February 12, 1995, p. D5.
(Rooms and Information Visualizer described.)
Peering Out the 'Real Time' Window.
Peter H. Lewis
New York Times, February 8, 1995, p. D1.
(Multicasting takes Internet users to the outer limits. Steve Deering is interviewed about the MBone.)
Amphibians in the Think Tank: Artists in Residence as Xerox PARC.
Marcia Tanner
Art Week, February 1995, p. 21.
(PARC Artists in Residence and some PARC scientists discuss the PAIRS program.)
A Talk with Xerox's Top Scientist.
Barbara Ettorre
Management Review, February 1995, p. 9.
(Interview with John Seely Brown.)
Total Recall: Today's Computers Remember Only What You Tell Them. . .
Robert Langreth
Popular Science, February 1995, p. 47.
(Mik Lamming describes the memory prosthesis work being done at RXRC Cambridge and PARC.)
3 Questions: Mark Weiser, Xerox PARC.
Information Week, January 30, 1995, p. 10.
(Interview with Mark Weiser.)
Xerox Touts DataGlyphs for Paper Data.
Seybold Report on Desktop Publishing, January 16, 1995, p. 32.
(The significance of Dataglyph technology is described.)
State of the Art in the Bay Area: Four Emerging Artists Battle Obscurity - You Can Make It and Still Be Broke.
Jerry Carroll
San Francisco Chronicle, January 13, 1995, p. D1.
A Conversation with John Seely Brown.
John Rheinfrank
Interactions, January 1995, p. 43.
The Office of the Future: Xerox PARC.
Wendy Taylor
PC Computing, January 1995, p. 192.
(Describes Ubicomp work, Liveboard and PARC Tab.)
At Xerox, a Plan of 1's and 0's.
John Holusha
The New York Times, December 18, 1994.
Smart Paper.
Jordan Gruber
Wired, December 1994.
Rolling Stones Live on Internet: Both a Big Deal and a Little Deal.
Neil Strauss
The New York Times, November 22, 1994, p. C15.
Get in the MOOd: Games: If You Have a Modem and Like Adventure, This MUDs for You.
Katie Hafner
Newsweek, November 7, 1994, p. 58.
We're Going to Have Computers Coming Out of the Woodwork.
Richard Wolkomir
Smithsonian, September 1994, p. 82.
US High-Tech Firms Redeem the Past: After Xerox's Spectacular Failure, Company Learns to Capitalize on Its Own Technologies.
Laurent Belsie
The Christian Science Monitor, August 3, 1994, p. 8.
Smart Paper Documents for the Electronic Age.
John Holusha
The New York Times, July 10, 1994, p. F9.
Biggest Flat-Panel Project Funded: Pentagon, 3 Firms Hope a Plant Will Open in a Few Years.
Lee Gomes
San Jose Mercury News, July 2, 1994, p. D11.
New Xerox Patent Uses Voice Recognition Technology for OCR.
Dan Elam
Contemplor, July 1994, p. 5.
Smart Paper: There's More on the Printed Page Than You Might Think.
Paul McCarthy
Omni, July 1994, p. 10.
Xerox Visionary: FutureTranscends Valley Trends.
Sheridan Tatsuno
New Technology Week, June 20, 1994.
When Will Flat Panel Pug-and-Play Like CRTs?
OEM Magazine, June 1994, p. 10.
Flat-Panel Update.
Charles Babcock
Cumputerworld, May 1994, p. 6.
Gray Matter.
W. Wayt Gibbs
Scientific American, May 1994, p. 114.
U.S. to Spend $1 Billion to Aid Computer Firms: Plan Would Help Industry Compete with Japan on Flat-Display Screens.
Keith Bradsher
San Francisco Chronicle, April 27, 1994, p. A1.
Document Manager Taps Data Visualizer.
Michael Vizard
PC Week, April 18, 1994, p. 63.
Close Up: Xerox PARC Won't Punt Future Again.
Sean Silverthorne
PC Week, April 11, 1994, p. A9.
XSoft Brings Document Management to PCs.
Seybold Report on Desktop Publishing, April 4, 1994, vol. 8, no. 8, p 29.
Break Room War Stories Increase Learning, Productivity.
INFOMART Magazine, Second Quarter 1994, p. 17.
The Power to Invent the Future: Xerox Pioneered Much of Today's PC Technology. Its Latest Work Could Be as Influential.
Tom Foremski
Financial Times, March 24, 1994, p. 18.
Eye On the Future: Xerox Palo Alto Research Center Develops Cutting-Edge Technologies.
Tom Foremski
San Francisco Examiner, March 13, 1994, p. C5.
Real ARPA Recipients.
Advanced Imaging, March 1994, p. 68.
Why Playing in MUDs is Becoming the Addiction of the '90s.
Josh Quittner
Wired, March 1994, p. 92.
PARC is Back.
Howard Rheingold
Wired, February 1994, p. 90.
Xerox Gets $21.4 Million for Advanced Screen Work.
Lee Gomez
San Jose Mercury News, January 20, 1994, p. 1E.
Electronic Imaging at Xerox.
Steven B. Bolte
Optics & Photonics, January 1994, p. 24.
Perspectives: Marc Weiser The World is Not a Desktop. What is the Metaphor for the Computer of the Future? . . .
Interactions, January 1994, p. 7.
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