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 Brad Glosserman

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Brad Glosserman
LIFE / Digital / CYBERIA
Apr 14, 1999
Cyberlife during wartime
My hanami last week started grimly. One participant, when asked why he looked so glum on such a happy occasion, explained that he was thinking of the Kosovo refugees. He had once been in the hills where they have fled, and even though he was prepared for it, he still remembers the cold and the discomfort....
COMMENTARY / World
Apr 3, 1999
Rethinking joint strategy on North Korea
North Korea continues to confound the world. The country's economy is on the rocks; it is estimated to have shrunk by more than 50 percent between 1992 and 1996. The government is unable to feed its own people; hundreds of thousands are thought to have died as a result of malnutrition-related diseases...
LIFE / Digital / CYBERIA
Mar 31, 1999
It's a poor workman ...
Readers probably haven't noticed, but The Japan Times has a new computer system. It's a lot like our old one, although it is speedier and it integrates a whole host of functions in one terminal; no longer do we have to leave our desk to accomplish different tasks.
LIFE / Digital / CYBERIA
Mar 17, 1999
The doctor is in
Steve Chang has a fondness for viruses. It's not as ghoulish as it sounds; he's obsessed with the computer variety, not the human kind. Fortunately for him -- unfortunately for us -- there are a lot out there.
CULTURE / Books
Mar 2, 1999
Faith isn't enough for China's Catholics
CHINA'S CATHOLICS: Tragedy and Hope in an Emerging Civil Society, by Richard Madsen. Berkeley, CA.: University of California Press, 1998, 191 pp., $27.50 (cloth). The Catholic Church has had a long and powerful influence on China. Missionaries first traveled to the Middle Kingdom in the seventh century...
COMMENTARY / World
Feb 20, 1999
Globalization, the world's whipping boy
For one brief moment less than a decade ago, the idea of "globalization" was viewed with more promise than peril. At the time, it represented an emerging economic reality: the merging of national markets into a single entity that traders and merchants anywhere could access at anytime. This "24-hour,...
LIFE / Digital / CYBERIA
Jan 20, 1999
Toys today, tools tomorrow
Cybersurfers never had it so good. The efforts of Apple's Steven Jobs to revive his legacy mean that we can order the iMac in one of five "flavors." Thanks, Steve. Bill Gates wants you to be able to go anywhere you want on the Net -- as long as Microsoft escorts you on the journey
JAPAN
Nov 4, 1997
Israel called obstacle to peace
Staff writer

Longform

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