Insert Title Here: A Template for Formatting a SAGE-AU'2006 Technical Paper

An Author[HREF1], Institution/Company, Address[HREF2]. author.email@domain.com

 

Abstract

This paper attempts to provide an example for authors to follow when formatting technical papers for SAGE-AU'2006. Abstracts should be between 100 and 300 words long, unlike this one. Authors should cut and paste content into the template rather than recreate the template using a html editor. We request you do this as most proprietry editors add in their own tags and code items that are not standard html.


Keywords

Paper formatting instructions, correct formatting


Introduction

This would normally introduce the content of the paper. Note that papers should be formatted using standard HTML tags (H1-H6, UL, OL, etc.). In particular, do not use FONT or SIZE tags - the Cascading Style Sheet that SAGE-AU 2006 uses (and which is referred to by this template) will take care of formatting text for you. Format section headings in your paper as H2 (H1 is reserved for the title of the paper).

What about subheadings?

This is a subheading, formatted as H3.

 

Another Heading

And so on...

 

Images

These should be placed in the same directory as the paper and linked to directly.

 

How do I do References?

These should follow the system below. Hypertext references should use the HREFX formalism shown. This is so that printed proceedings will contain the full URLs for use by readers.

For example if a paper were to say....

Neilsen(1995)[ HREF3] discusses the future of Hypertext.

or if a paper uses as list

When computers entered the equation, personal bibliographical software such as -

These package provide much more sophisticated capabilities. As well as providing searching features it is possible to scan drafts of research papers so that footnotes could be generated automatically.

Using the HREF system means that for the reader (of the screen or the paper copy) the text is not littered with long http addresses. The online reader can click and go to the reference immediately while the reader of the paper text has the full http address provided at the end of the paper.

Table and graphics should be sized to fit well within the typical print page format. Failure to do this will mean that while tables and graphics can be viewed by scolling onscreen they will cropped in the paper-based copy of the proceedings.

 

References

Some sample reference formats

Fleming, J. (1998) Web Navigation: Designing the User Experience, O'Reilly, Beijing.

Egan, D. E., Remde, J. R., Gomez, L. M., Landauer, T. K., Eberhardt, J. and Lochbaum, C. C. (1989) Formative Design-Evaluation of SuperBook Research Contributions in ACM Transactions on Information Systems, v.7 n.1, p30-57.

Leventhal, L. M., Teasley, B. M., Instone, K., Rohlman, D. S., and Farhat, J. (1993) Sleuthing in HyperHolmes: An Evaluation of Using Hypertext vs. a Book to Answer Questions in Behaviour and Information Technology, v.12, n.3, p149-164.

McKnight, C., Dillon, A. Richardson, J. (1991) Hypertext in Context, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge.

Nielsen, J. (1995) The Future of Hypertext, Interactions, v.2, n.2, p66-78. [HREF3] .

Shneiderman, B. (1997) Designing the User Interface: Strategies for Effective Human-Computer Interaction, Addison Wesley Logman, Reading, Massachusetts.

Valdez, F., Chignell, M., and Glenn, B (1988) Browsing Models for Hypermedia Databases in Proceedings of the Human Factors Society 32nd Annual Meeting, 1988, v.1, p.318-322.

 

Hypertext References

HREF1 http://www.author.url/
HREF2 http://www.author.address/
HREF3 http://www.acm.org/pubs/articles/journals/interactions/1995-2-2/p66-nielsen/p66-nielsen.pdf
HREF4 http://www.niles.com/
HREF5 http://www.risinc.com/welcome.html
HREF6 http://www.ee.surrey.ac.uk/Personal/T.Ors/bibtex/

Copyright

The System Administrators Guild of Australia© 2006. The authors assign to The System Administrator's Guild of Australia and other educational and non-profit institutions a non-exclusive licence to use this document for personal use and in courses of instruction provided that the article is used in full and this copyright statement is reproduced. The authors also grant a non-exclusive licence to The System Administrators Guild of Australia to publish this document in full on the World Wide Web and on CD-ROM and in printed form with the conference papers and for the document to be published on mirrors on the World Wide Web.