weblogs.hitwise.com- Since it forced users to register in order to view its content, the Times has lost market share. …
The Economist- The future for blogs may be special-interest publishing. …
themoneyillusion.com- If you disagree with someone, their views will always seems simplistic. …
NY Times- Media organizations can file all the briefs they want about protecting their work product from free-riders and insurgent hordes of digital pilot fish, but once they break their own rules and start feeding on one another, the game is over. …
niemanlab.org- Blogging, uploading photos, editing Wikipedia entries — these are all symptoms of the surplus put to use. And they should be celebrated as such. …
blogs.ft.com- Japanese executives seem to have had more difficulties handling relations with their Chinese workers than western competitors. …
hollywoodreporter.com- Congress has driven a stake through the heart of movie boxoffice futures trading. …
Reuters- Reducing deficits while at the same time accelerating economic growth: is it a chimera, or does it actually exist? …
Business Insider- The pain of austerity will be far higher in European than it would be in the US, which makes the European austerity vs. U.S. stimulus divide just perverse. …
econospeak.blogspot.com- Unless one is in a world of uniformly small, highly open economies, aggressive Keynesianism can be justified one country at a time. But the US is not one of those. …
spiegel.de- The G-20 is now threatening to become a club of members that blame each other for their problems. …
theatlantic.com- Instead of asking parents and non-parents whether they are happy right now, we might ask whether they are becoming more like the people they want to be. …
NY Times- Iceland’s capital elect itself a former comedian. …
When I’m not blogging, my day job is at Viewsflow – a startup that aggregates economic and financial analysis. We also have an impressive technology platform behind it that obsessively tracks all those that dare to leave their footprints in blogs and the Twitter-sphere.
Impressed yet? Or maybe just a bit scared?
Anyway, with all that Apple iPad madness and all, at Viewsflow, we’ve decided to give away an Apple iPad in the coming three weeks.
I’m pretty sure working for Viewsflow will disqualify me from ever winning, so readers of my blog, go forth and snatch the prize! Seriously, I am giving up my wages for this, go get it!
Seriously.
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Here’s more about Viewsflow. And, against all odds, we are actually based in London.
In 1966, the Harvard Business Review introduced the idea of “paperless clearing houses”, in reference to the emergence of digital data storage. Since then, the microprocessor industry emerged, personal computers were introduced, and before we knew it, everyone is connected by the web. The delivery and the digitization of data is no longer a fantasy.
But the implementation and eventual realization of this inevitable “paperless” world, however, is taking longer than expected. Ten years ago, we were told that every participant in the information age is marching towards the digital world in more or less uniformity. But despite the obvious technological leaps, we are still far from a paperless world.
Paperless for some
So far, we have managed to scrape a layer off of perfunctory bookkeeping. In areas such as online tax filing and the digitization of our numerous monthly financial statements, the quick and convenient source-to-records applications have surely saved both cost and time for all parties involved. In the case of communication, personal letters are replaced by the superior email deliveries. In those cases, paper as the medium of communication has been eliminated.
Now with various access points for information, cheap storage devices, accessible scanners and various other forms of affordable technology, all of which are competing to drive paper out of our lives for good, what is the outlook for paper?
Professional uses
The term “paper-pusher” was coined for a reason. Knowing that, it should not be surprising that paper is far from disappearing, particularly within some of the older professions. In legal and business communities, for example, cyber security risks, as well as legal concerns still mandate paper record-keeping for a period of time.
From my own experience in a corporate setting, printing is not something you can move away from quickly. Most businesses operate from desktops, thus short of sharing your desktop – which many more tech savvy businesses do on a regular basis, one need to print off documents in order to discuss and demonstrate. Plus, even when performing numbers-related tasks, where computer applications are assets, printing documents for review is deemed mandatory as a last check-up. Read more...