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IEEE Communications Magazine, Volume 33
Volume 33, Number 1, January 1995
- Luís F. M. de Moraes, Stephen B. Weinstein:

The Internet multicast from ITS: how it was done and implications for the future. 6-8 - Mostafa Hashem Sherif:

Federal organizations and the commercialization of technology. 10 - Jay E. Padgett, Christoph G. Günther, Takeshi Hattori:

Overview of wireless personal communications. 28-41 - Jørgen Bach Andersen, Theodore S. Rappaport

, Susumu Yoshida:
Propagation measurements and models for wireless communications channels. 42-49 - David D. Falconer, Fumiyuki Adachi, Björn Gudmundson:

Time division multiple access methods for wireless personal communications. 50-57 - Ryuji Kohno, Reuven Meidan, Laurence B. Milstein:

Spread spectrum access methods for wireless communications. 58-67 - Heinrich Meyr, Ravi Subramanian:

Advanced digital receiver principles and technologies for PCS. 68-78 - Raymond Steele, James Whitehead, W. C. Wong

:
System aspects of cellular radio. 80-87 - Bijan Jabbari, Giovanni Colombo, Akihisa Nakajima, Jayant Kulkarni:

Network issues for wireless communications. 88-99 - S. Srinivasan:

Impact of enhanced feature interactions. 100-102
Volume 33, Number 2, February 1995
- Margaret Hopkins, Graham Louth, Hilary Bailey, Ronnie Yellon, Ade Ajibulu, Mari Niva:

A multi-faceted approach to forecasting broadband demand and traffic. 36-42 - Kjell Stordahl, Eddie Murphy:

Forecasting long-term demand for services in the residential market. 44-49 - Ondria J. Wasem, Alan M. Gross, Gerald A. Tlapa:

Forecasting broadband demand between geographic areas. 50-57 - Tsong-Ho Wu:

Emerging technologies for fiber network survivability. 58-59 - Heinrich Armbrüster:

The flexibility of ATM: supporting future multimedia and mobile communications. 76-84 - Hidetoshi Miura, Kazumitsu Maki, Kazuhiro Nishihata:

SDH network evolution in Japan. 86-92 - Jack Keil Wolf, Ephraim Zehavi

:
P2 codes: pragmatic trellis codes utilizing punctured convolutional codes. 94-99 - Hikmet Sari, Georges Karam, Isabelle Jeanclaude:

Transmission techniques for digital terrestrial TV broadcasting. 100-109
Volume 33, Number 3, March 1995
- Roch H. Glitho

, Stephen Hayes:
Telecommunications management network: vision vs. reality. 47-52 - David J. Sidor:

Managing telecommunications networks using TMN interface standards. 54-60 - Maarten Kockelmans, Eric de Jong:

Overview of IN and TMN harmonization. 62-66 - Thomas T. Towle:

TMN as applied to the GSM network. 68-73 - Henry J. Fowler:

TMN-based broadband ATM network management. 74-79 - Kazuo Yamagishi, Noriyuki Sasaki, Kazuyoshi Morino:

An implementation of a TMN-based SDH management system in Japan. 80-85 - Kaveh Pahlavan, Thomas H. Probert, Mitchell Chase:

Trends in local wireless networks. 88-95 - Mobeen Khan, John Kilpatrick:

MOBITEX and mobile data standards. 96-101 - Raymond Steele, John Williams, Derek Chandler, Shirin Dehghan, Aidan Collard:

Teletraffic performance of GSM900/DCS1800 in street microcells. 102-108
Volume 33, Number 4, April 1995
- David C. Yeung, F. Allen Morgan:

Utilities and two-way customer communication systems. 33-38 - Andrew Paff:

Hybrid fiber/coax in the public telecommunications infrastructure. 40-45 - Cesar A. Johnston:

Architecture and performance of HIPPI-ATM-SONET terminal adapters. 46-51 - Philip J. Kyees, Ronald C. McConnell, Kamran Sistanizadeh:

ADSL: a new twisted-pair access to the information highway. 52-60 - William E. Stephens, Thomas C. Banwell:

155.52 Mb/s data transmission on category 5 cable plant. 62-69 - John C. Bellamy:

Digital network synchronization. 70-83 - Byeong Gi Lee, Seok Chang Kim:

Low-rate parallel scrambling techniques for today's lightwave transmission. 84-95
Volume 33, Number 5, May 1995
- John W. Eng, James F. Mollenauer:

IEEE Project 802.14: standards for digital convergence. 20-23 - Joseph Mitola III:

The software radio architecture. 26-38 - Jeffery A. Wepman:

Analog-to-digital converters and their applications in radio receivers. 39-45 - Rupert Baines:

The DSP bottleneck. 46-54 - Raymond J. Lackey, Donald W. Upmal:

Speakeasy: the military software radio. 56-61 - Joseph Kennedy, Mark C. Sullivan:

Direction finding and "smart antennas" using software radio architectures. 62-68 - Hong Linh Truong, William W. Ellington Jr., Jean-Yves Le Boudec, Andreas Meier, J. Wayne Pace:

LAN emulation on an ATM network. 70-85
Volume 33, Number 6, June 1995
- Raj Pandya:

Emerging mobile and personal communication systems. 44-52 - Patricia E. Wirth:

Teletraffic implications of database architectures in mobile and personal communications. 54-59 - Gregory P. Pollini, Kathleen S. Meier-Hellstern, David J. Goodman:

Signaling traffic volume generated by mobile and personal communications. 60-65 - Thomas F. La Porta, Malathi Veeraraghavan, Philip A. Treventi, Ramachandran Ramjee:

Distributed call processing for personal communications services. 66-75 - Mikko Laitinen, Jari Rantala:

Integration of intelligent network services into future GSM networks. 76-86 - Abdul M. Youssef, Eva Kalman, Laurent Benzoni:

Technico-economic methods for radio spectrum assignment. 88-94 - Robert M. Jopson, Alan H. Gnauck:

Dispersion compensation for optical fiber systems. 96-102
Volume 33, Number 7, July 1995
- Gerald R. Ash:

Dynamic network evolution, with examples from AT&T's evolving dynamic network. 26-39 - Konosuke Kawashima, Akiya Inoue:

State- and time-dependent routing in the NTT network. 40-47 - Jean Régnier, François Bédard, Jean Choquette, Alain Caron:

Dynamically controlled routing in networks with non-DCR-compliant switches. 48-52 - Arik N. Kashper, Yu Watanabe:

Dynamic routing in the multiple carrier international network. 54-61 - K. R. Krishnan, Robert D. Doverspike, Charles D. Pack:

Improved survivability with multi-layer dynamic routing. 62-68 - Prosper Chemouil

, Jelila Khalfet, Marc Lebourges:
A fuzzy control approach for adaptive traffic routing. 70-76 - Nikolai Sokolov, Alexander Mikov:

Evolution of telecommunications in Russia. 78-85 - Jonas Bitinas:

Telecommunications in Lithuania. 86-92 - Boris Goldstein

, Lev Sloutsky:
Introduction of modern telecommunications equipment in Russia and the New Republics. 94-99
Volume 33, Number 8, August 1995
- Mario P. Vecchi:

Broadband networks and services: architecture and control. 24-32 - William W. Pugh, Gerald Boyer:

Broadband access: comparing alternatives. 34-46 - Chuck Carroll:

Development of integrated cable/telephony in the United Kingdom. 48-50 - Charles A. Eldering, Nageen Himayat, Floyd M. Gardner:

CATV return path characterization for reliable communications. 62-69 - Richard Weinberg:

Producing content producers [computer animation]. 70-73 - Stefan Böcking:

TIP's performance quality of service. 74-81 - Koichi Asatani, Shinya Nogami:

Standardization of network technologies and services. 82-90
Volume 33, Number 9, September 1995
- Leo Nederlof, Kris Struyve, Chris O'Shea, Howard Misser, Yonggang Du, Braulio Tamayo:

End-to-end survivable broadband networks. 63-70 - Ryutaro Kawamura, Ikuo Tokizawa:

Self-healing virtual path architecture in ATM networks. 72-79 - Eiji Oki, Naoaki Yamanaka, Francis Pitcho:

Multiple-availability-level ATM network architecture. 80-88 - Klaus Peter May, Pierre Semal, Yonggang Du, Christoph Herrmann:

A fast restoration system for ATM-ring-based LANs. 90-98 - Ching-Chir Shyur, Shan-Hsin Tsao, Ying-Ming Wu:

Survivable network planning methods and tools in Taiwan. 100-107 - Henry Chasia:

Satellites and developing countries. 110-112 - Paulo Ricardo Hermano Balduino:

Latin America goes wireless via satellite. 114-122 - Malcolm Johnson:

Europe prepares for WRC-95: mobile satellite service issues. 124-127 - Juan de la Cruz Silveira Zavala:

A new CITEL fosters telecommunications in the Americas. 128-131
Volume 33, Number 10, October 1995
- Ernst Nordström, Jakob Carlström, Olle Gällmo, Lars Asplund:

Neural networks for adaptive traffic control in ATM networks. 43-49 - Joaquim E. Neves, Mário Jorge Leitão, Luís B. Almeida

:
Neural networks in B-ISDN flow control: ATM traffic prediction or network modeling? 50-56 - Atsushi Hiramatsu:

Training techniques for neural network applications in ATM. 58 - Young-Keun Park, Gyungho Lee:

Applications of neural networks in high-speed communication networks. 68-74 - Ahmed A. Tarraf, Ibrahim W. Habib, Tarek N. Saadawi:

Intelligent traffic control for ATM broadband networks. 76-85 - Paul F. Sass, Lanny Gorr:

Communications for the digitized battlefield of the 21st century. 86-95 - Ralph T. Allen, Stephen E. Arkin, Robert E. Lawrence:

Moving naval C4I into the next century. 96-105 - John B. Evanowsky:

Information for the warrior. 106-112 - Wing C. Quan, E. Robert Sive:

Post-2000 tactical communications systems for NATO. 113-118
Volume 33, Number 11, November 1995
- Michael O. Polley, William F. Schreiber, Susie J. Wee:

Comments on "transmission techniques for digital terrestrial TV broadcasting" [and reply]. 22-26 - Michael E. Lukacs, David G. Boyer:

A universal broadband multipoint teleconferencing service for the 21st century. 36-43 - Ichiro Iida, Takashi Nishigaya, Koso Murakami:

DUET: an agent-based personal communications network. 44-49 - Daniel Deloddere:

Evolution of a narrowband exchange toward broadband. 50-56 - Alpna Jain, Wolfgang Fischer, Pierre-Yves Sibille:

An evolvable ATM-based video network design supporting multiple access network technologies. 58-63 - Ernst Munter, James Parker, Paul Kirkby:

A high-capacity ATM switch based on advanced electronic and optical technologies. 64-71 - Claus Schmidt, Max Sevcik:

Do-it-yourself TMN applications by visual programming methods. 72-76 - Fabrice Dupuy, Gunnar Nilsson, Yuji Inoue:

The TINA consortium: toward networking telecommunications information services. 78-83 - Frowin Derr, Manfred N. Huber, Guenther Kettler, Norbert Thorweihe:

An optical infrastructure for future telecommunications networks. 84-88 - Malathi Veeraraghavan, Thomas F. La Porta, Wai Sum Lai:

An alternative approach to call/connection control in broadband switching systems. 90-96 - Anna Hac:

Wireless and cellular architecture and services. 98-104
Volume 33, Number 12, December 1995
- Reed E. Hundt, Gregory L. Rosston:

Spectrum flexibility will promote competition and the public interest. 40-43 - Larry Irving:

Spectrum management: a balancing process. 44-46 - Robert E. Allen:

Toward competition and choice [telecommunication industry]. 48-49 - Richard D. McCormick:

Research yes, Restrictions no [telecommunication industry]. 50-51 - Richard C. Notebaert:

Technology's contribution to the competitive marketplace [telecommunication industry]. 52-54 - Richard E. Wiley:

Digital television: the end of the beginning. 56-57 - Thomas E. Wheeler:

It's the information, not the highway. 58-61 - James M. Smith:

The future of competition in long-distance telecommunications. 62-64 - Eli M. Noam:

Taking the next step beyond spectrum auctions: open spectrum access. 66-73 - Jay Kitchen:

PCIA: ushering in a new era of communications. 74-77 - Bob Anderson:

Telecommunications regulation in the states. 78-80 - Mike J. O'Mahony:

Optical multiplexing in fiber networks: progress in WDM and OTDM. 82-88 - Tsong-Ho Wu, Noriaki Yoshikai, Hiroyuki Fujii:

ATM signaling transport network architectures and analysis. 90-99

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