Decision Support Systems
by Vicki L. Sauter
Chapter
Outline
DSS In
Action
DSS
Software
Automobile
Links
General DSS
Sources
Index
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Sauter's Home Page
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©John Wiley & Sons
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User Interface in Action
An approach for displaying results
Araha, Inc. Demo: The Visual Metadata Company
Critical Window
Digital Maps Tell the Time
As Easy As Breathing
For High-Tech Control, the Eyes (and Hands) Have It
Feeling Blue? This Robot Knows It
Giving Customers What They Want: Why Market Orientation is Still Vital to Customer Retention
Interface Gets the Point
Interview With the KDE and Gnome UI/Usability Developers
Project Descry
The Sociology of Interfaces
The Touchy-Feely Side Of Telecoms: Ed Colgate
Touching Molecules With Your Bare Hands
Touch Technology: Internet May Let Us 'Feel' the Stars
User Interfaces and Decision Making
User Interface Design -- Software Tools
User Interface Example
User Interfaces
Visual Modeling's New Look
Scrivener: A word processor designed for its user interface
Why We Should Lose the Back Button
Will Machines Ever Understand Us?
The Interface Revolutionary
You There, at the Computer: Pay Attention
Data Visualization
Graphics and Web Design Based on Edward Tufte's Principles
Finding the meaning of numbers
Edward R. Tufte’s Presentation Tips
Tufte on Visualizing Information
Edward Tufte and Graphic Design
An Interview with Edward Tufte
Visual display of information - notes from Edward Tufte's lecture in Chicago, 8/16/00
Summary of Edward Tufte's Visualization Course
The Low-Down on Layout for Visual Communication
The Data Artist
The Challenger: An Information Disaster
The Work of Edward Tufte

This map drawn by Charles Joseph Minard portrays the losses suffered by Napoleon’s army in the Russian campaign of 1812. Beginning at the left on the Polish-Russian border near the Niemen, the thick band shows the size of the army (422,000 men) as it invaded Russia. The width of the band indicates the size of the army at each position. In September, the army reached Moscow with 100,000 men. The path of Napoleon’s retreat from Moscow in the bitterly cold winter is depicted by the dark lower band, which is tied to temperature and time scales. The remains of the Grande Armée struggled out of Russia with 10,000 men. Minard’s graphic tells a rich, coherent story with its multivariate data, far more enlightening than just a single number bouncing along over time. Six variables are plotted: the size of the army, its location on a two-dimensional surface, direction of the army’s movement, and temperature on various dates during the retreat from Moscow. It may well be the best statistical graphic ever drawn.
Visualizing Information for Advocacy
Business Information Visualization
Human-Computer Interaction Guides
The Failure of Customization: Or Why People Don’t Buy Jeans Online
Graph Examples
Human-Computer Interaction Bibliography
Human Interaction Technology Lab
Intelligent User Interfaces
Interface Hall of Shame
Organizing Information Spatially
In Search of a Customizable and Uniform User Interface
Visualization Trends For The Noosphere
Dashboards
Dashboard for Outlook Soft example
Dashboard for Executive example
Dashboard for ProClarity example
Dashboard for LogiXML example
Dashboard for Intelex Technologies example
Giving the Boss the Big Picture
What's on Your Dashboard?
How to Score Points with a Dashboard
Mood of the Market
Design Issues
Design Issues
Haptics as a user interface
Teaching Speech
Typeface Selection
Metaphors
Inside the Joint Strike Fighter
Searching for Solutions
Human-Centric Computing
The Interface Revolutionary
Project Athena
User-Interface Devices
Multi-Purpose Enabling Technology Lab
PenWriter
Talk to the (Gloved) Hand
Virtual Reality
Superscape
General Information About User-Interfaces
The HCI Bibliography
Suggested Readings on HCI, UI, and HF
Computer Almanac

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