Seems to me that a lot of these services are things many of us do on -line from home (and at work) in the US, and that we would look at the various services described above differently if the first point for access had been an ATM rather than a home or work computer.
Much of the technology spending that happened in "the spending blow-out of the 1990s" was investment in infrastructure that IT people justified as preventing total collapse from Y2k. That stuff is just starting to wear out now, and it will be replaced gradually, rather than in another spending spree.
great, another way to manifest social distinctions--those with money for technology can type, the poor ones have to write. And of course, educators would rather get papers they can actually read, so they selfishly encourage typing.
In case you were wondering about Vector Capital, here's some history:
Vector Capital has over $200 million under management. Our first fund, Vector Capital I, with $40 million of capital, is fully committed or reserved for follow-on investments in existing portfolio companies. The capital for our first fund was provided solely by the Ziff family.
(from their website)
Awesome! You got Microsoft into the first paragraph of an article about voting machine security!
Seems to me that a lot of these services are things many of us do on -line from home (and at work) in the US, and that we would look at the various services described above differently if the first point for access had been an ATM rather than a home or work computer.
Much of the technology spending that happened in "the spending blow-out of the 1990s" was investment in infrastructure that IT people justified as preventing total collapse from Y2k. That stuff is just starting to wear out now, and it will be replaced gradually, rather than in another spending spree.
Internet Explorer is the only browser the does follow all ITS standards
I love it! Let's you and him fight!
great, another way to manifest social distinctions--those with money for technology can type, the poor ones have to write. And of course, educators would rather get papers they can actually read, so they selfishly encourage typing.
In case you were wondering about Vector Capital, here's some history: Vector Capital has over $200 million under management. Our first fund, Vector Capital I, with $40 million of capital, is fully committed or reserved for follow-on investments in existing portfolio companies. The capital for our first fund was provided solely by the Ziff family. (from their website)
Reaally kewl--an LED to let me know when I'm having fun!