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Artz, John
George Washington University
Washington, Washington DC
 
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John M. Artz is an associate professor of information systems in the School of Business at The George Washington University in Washington, DC. He teaches technical courses in relational databases, data warehousing, web-based systems development, and various programming languages. He teaches philosophical courses in the ethics of technology and the philosophy of science as it applies to business research. Historically, his research interests were in the philosophical foundations of information systems; philosophical issues in relational database and data warehouse design; and the philosophy of science as it applies to information systems research. Artz has written nearly four dozen scholarly articles on a wide variety of topics including philosophical issues in database design, and the epistemological role of stories in the ethics of technology. In addition, he has published over 100 book and article reviews in ACM Computing Reviews. Artz has a wide variety of interests that focus, generally, on making sense out of emerging information technologies, such as virtual worlds, video games, and, most recently, big data, bringing both technical and philosophical expertise to bear on these new phenomena.

Artz joined the faculty of the School of Business and Public Management in the Fall of 1992. He was promoted to associate professor in 1998. During his time at GWU, in addition to his teaching and research responsibilities, Artz has served on the Faculty Senate from 2005 to the present; as the program director of the Master of Science in Information Technology program from Fall 1999 to Fall 2003; as the webmaster for the School of Business and Public Management from Fall 1996 to Fall 2000; and on the Faculty Advisory Committee for the University Teaching Center from Fall 1993 to Fall 1996. In addition to these major commitments, Artz has participated in a wide variety of lesser service roles too numerous to mention.

Prior to moving into academia, he spent nearly 20 years in the corporate world including The MITRE Corporation, Arbitron Ratings, Southwest Research Institute, General Electric Information Systems, American Management Systems, and Washington Gas Light Company. While serving in industry, Artz took on a variety of roles primarily related to database development and administration and software development. He has industry expertise in relational databases (serving several times as DBA), enterprise networks, expert systems, and graphical user interfaces. He holds a patent (#5,025,382 - Data link Controller Interface) on a direct manipulation user interface for air traffic controllers in a digital communications environment. In addition, he has done professional software development in nearly a dozen different programming languages including Fortran, COBOL, PL/1, Pascal, C, C++, Prolog, Lisp, and Visual Basic.

 
 
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- 10 of 102 reviews

   
   Ludics: play as humanistic inquiry
Rapti V., Gordon E., Palgrave Macmillan, Singapore, 2021. 495 pp.  Type: Book (978-9-811574-34-4)

This book is a collection of 20 essays on the philosophy and sociology of games and play. Lest this sound a little too arcane, I would point out that this is obviously relevant to the design of video games of all kinds. And it can help us understa...

Jan 4 2022  
   Identity, institutions, and governance in an AI world: transhuman relations
Bloom P., Palgrave Macmillan, Cham, Switzerland, 2020. 268 pp.  Type: Book (978-3-030361-80-8)

You must pause for a moment to get into the right frame of mind for this book. Grant the author a willing suspension of disbelief and allow for the possibility that several major breakthroughs have occurred in artificial intelligence (...

Apr 19 2021  
   T-minus AI: humanity’s countdown to artificial intelligence and the new pursuit of global power
Kanaan M., Benbella Books, Dallas, TX, 2020. 284 pp.  Type: Book (978-1-948836-94-4)

In order to understand this book in context, consider the following analogy. Birds fly, and airplanes fly. But it isn’t the same “fly.” A flock of birds can take off without running into each other, but if...

Nov 19 2020  
   Beginning security with Microsoft technologies: protecting Office 365, devices, and data
Lakshmi V., Apress, New York, NY, 2019. 252 pp.  Type: Book (978-1-484248-52-2)

This book is written for a very specific audience. If you are a junior technical person (say a programmer, systems administrator, or even an entry-level security specialist) in an organization running Office 365, Windows 10, and Azure ...

Apr 24 2020  
   All data are local: thinking critically in a data-driven society
Loukissas Y., The MIT Press, Cambridge, MA, 2019. 272 pp.  Type: Book (978-0-262039-66-6)

Two important points of general interest can be drawn from this book, although both points require more effort than most readers are willing to make....

Nov 25 2019  
   Personal finance with Python: using pandas, Requests, and Recurrent
Humber M., Apress, New York, NY, 2018. 117 pp.  Type: Book (978-1-484238-01-1), Reviews: (1 of 2)

I have probably said this way too many times in reviews, but it remains true and to the point: one of the great things about learning Python programming is that it allows you to move more easily into other areas that you might want to ...

Jan 31 2019  
   Introduction to modeling and simulation with MATLAB and Python
Gordon S., Guilfoos B., Chapman&Hall/CRC, Boca Raton, FL, 2017. 210 pp.  Type: Book (978-1-498773-87-4)

This is a very unusual book. It is concise and well written on the one hand, with bewildering content on the other. If one steps back far enough, the book could be described as a tutorial on writing programs for modeling and simulation...

Oct 18 2018  
   Deep learning with Python: a hands-on introduction
Ketkar N., Apress, New York, NY, 2017. 226 pp.  Type: Book (978-1-484227-65-7)

This book is written specifically for Python programmers who wish to learn how to apply their Python programming skills to machine learning applications. Consequently, a very brief introduction to machine learning is necessary in order...

Jul 16 2018  
   Cracking codes with Python: an introduction to building and breaking ciphers
Sweigart A., No Starch Press, San Francisco, CA, 2018. 416 pp.  Type: Book (978-1-593278-22-9)

One of the many things I like about the Python programming language is that, once you learn basic Python programming, a whole host of other interesting ideas are within your grasp. I am one of those people who likes to learn things by ...

Jun 1 2018  
   A brief history of data visualization
Jeffrey Heer. YouTube, 01:27:13, published on Mar 22, 2017, Stanford, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N00g9Q9stBo. Type: Video

This is a 1.5-hour video of a PowerPoint lecture on the history of data visualization. The first 40 minutes is a survey of historical attempts at data visualization with numerous illustrations. The examples were interesting but would h...

May 10 2018  
 
 
 
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