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Seminar: Internet Economics 2

This seminar on Internet Economics has been finished off by July 4, 2001. Its separate reports and slides may be accessed below. The complete Seminar report is availabe as a PDF file (2.64 MByte).


Note: Separate talks and presentations are linked below, however, once a link is dangling, there is no on-line version available. Name

Supervisor

No.

Subject and Title

Draft
Due Date

Talk Date

P. Stähli

 JG

1.

Service Level Agreements and slides

April 12, 2001

April 18, 2001

M. Ziswiler

 HH

2.

Policy-based Networking and slides

April 18, 2001

April 25, 2001

M. Nejadpour

 JG

3.

Application Service Providing and slides

April 25, 2001

May 2, 2001

S. Markwalder

 PR (BS)

4.

Auctions in the Internet and slides

May 2, 2001

May 9, 2001

T. Schlatter

 PK

5.

Internet Marketing: Advertising and Content Value and slides

May 9, 2001

May 16, 2001

A. Ettlin

 BS

6.

Internet Services Technology and Perspectives and slides

May 23, 2001

May 30, 2001

M. Vinje

 PF

7.

E-Shops, B2B, and B2C Relationships in the Internet and slides

May 30, 2001

June 6, 2001

P. Meier

 PK

8.

Internet Service Provider Market: Technology and Competition and slides

June 6, 2001

June 13, 2001

M. Brändle

 BS

9.

Business Models for the Internet: Fixed and Mobile and slides

June 13, 2001

June 20, 2001

C. Welti,
C. Saupper

 PF

10.

M-Commerce: Technology and Structure and slides

June 20, 2001

July 4, 2001

The supervisors are Prof. Dr. B. Stiller (BS), P. Fluri (PF), J. Gerke (JG), Hasan (HH), P. Kurtansky (PK), and Dr. P. Reichl (PR). Please check with them personally at the due date in the seminar break when a feedback meeting can be arranged on a bilateral basis.

Procedure

All talks will be prepared in a draft version a week in advance of the date mentioned above. This includes the preparation of a 16 pages summary in paper form, which need to be handed into the supervisors by that date as well. In addition, a bi-lateral meeting of app. 15 min will be set between the presenter and the supervisor to discuss the draft.

The corrected version will be prepared into a final version until noon of the presentation date. A two-side per page paper copy is due for final check purposes. An electronic version in FrameMaker or Word is to be sent the same date by e-mail to stiller@tik.ee.ethz.ch, flury@tik.ee.ethz.ch, gerke@tik.ee.ethz.ch, hasan@tik.ee.ethz.ch, kurtansk@tik.ee.ethz.ch, reichl@ftw.at, respectively.

Talk Information

The talk will last 45 min per presentation. Share the time equally for motivating/summarizing and presenting technical details as well.

After the talk and additional 15 min break, the questions and discussions part will begin. This includes the answering of questions coming from the audience on one hand, and the preparation of two to three controversially discussable statememts put up by the two presenters, on the other hand, e.g., to which extent is the topic presented relevant to equipment providers, do they have to adapt their technologies in place? How will the introduction of the scheme presented make users shift their usage paradigms? Or, is the set of approaches available an opportunity for the new economy, where are their risks? It is highly recommended to read other talk titles and relate questions to them as well.

The talk needs to be backed by a set of slides prepared from the presenters. It shall be well organized, include a front slide with title, presenter, and outline, and sum up the talk after a clear and structured presentation of technical, systematic, and correct details. On average you can assume a 2-3 min talking time per slide, which makes a slide set of app. 18-22 slides necessary. Avoid too much text on the slide, but clearly entitle and identify pictures and graphs on them. Use a font larger than 16 pt in the general case of text.

 


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Last updated June 16, 2001 by stiller@tik.ee.ethz.ch