I'm an Aoir member and I don't if I have been given a passport to visit the paper achieve. Please inform me who I should contact to know my user name and passport to the paper achieve. Many thanks, Wu Mei
joining aoir, renewing membership, and with that the ability to view papers is available at http://www.aoir.org/members login and password problems are resolvable by e-mailing suggestions@aoir.org, which is also the best address for making suggestions. if your join now you do get complete access to the papers for the term of your membership. on a different note remember the authors retain copyrights to their papers and aoir only has the right to distribute the papers to members, as that is the only right we ask for, so anything beyond personal use by members, such as forwarding it to friends, a list, publishing, etc. requires that you contact the original author for permission. most of the authors also reserve the right to be contacted prior to citation and any use of any part of these papers, please respect their wishes. have a nice day, On Thursday, October 31, 2002, at 04:59 AM, meiwu@umac.mo wrote:
I'm an Aoir member and I don't if I have been given a passport to visit the paper achieve. Please inform me who I should contact to know my user name and passport to the paper achieve. Many thanks, Wu Mei
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jeremy hunsinger jhuns@vt.edu on the ibook www.cddc.vt.edu www.cddc.vt.edu/jeremy () ascii ribbon campaign - against html mail /\ - against microsoft attachments
Dear Steve, Anna, Meiwu, and others who are trying to get AoIR 3.0 papers, but cannot access the members website for whatever reason. I second what Steve and Jeremy have said so far. There really are some issues involved here, including personnel labor (hail to Jeremy for putting these papers online in the first place!), copyright, even privacy, and more. However, nothing stops you from contacting an author on your own. Admittedly, that is a little bit more work, but most people are easily found (googlized, as Nancy puts it so well) online. You can request their paper that way, and chances are, they will send it to you. If they don't, it's probably not available online either. Can't remember the exact spelling of someone's name, or their institutional affiliation? Lost the conference program somewhere between Maastricht and home? As far as I know, the program is still online at aoir.org/2002. I fully understand your desire to lay your hands on these papers, having spent about a ream of paper myself printing off the odd paper just the other day. So I hope this was helpful. Ulla Bunz
participants (3)
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jeremy hunsinger -
meiwu@umac.mo -
Ulla Bunz