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.NET is dead?
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À
09/06/2011 03:27:12
Information générale
Forum:
ASP.NET
Catégorie:
Autre
Titre:
Versions des environnements
OS:
Windows Server 2003
Divers
Thread ID:
01512925
Message ID:
01513762
Vues:
79
>>>>What about the typical office workers who crunch spreadsheets, process HR details, handle Accounts Payable, Accounts Receivable, etc? Are they going to function without a desktop?
>>
>>Those A/R and A/P tasks are slowly morphing or even disappearing.
>>In this case, business is far behind individuals who have moved more quickly, but
>>more and more of our clients are ordering inventory and sending, receiving and paying bills electronically.
>>Here's something you can say with certainty:
>>
>>Someone who plans to make a living selling paper checks is in for trouble.
>>
>>I personally write less than 5 a year and our clients are gradually moving off them.
>>Payroll in most companies has become largely paperless with payments and documentation going to employees and government agencies electronically and alll the typical end of quarter and end of years tasks which once took days and weeks, now happen in hours with a fraction of the previous operator and machine effort.
>>The once tedious bank reconciliation is largely automatic.
>>
>>So, yes it's conceivable that the desktop, as it relates to some of those functions, will be obsolete because of the way those tasks are changing.
>
>
>Paper checks ? you must be joking. It's at least years ago that i saw or wrote one of those. Are Am. banks really that far behind ?

If you go to a friend's birthday party or some graduation event or something where you need to give a gift of money, how do you do it? give them cash?
"The creative process is nothing but a series of crises." Isaac Bashevis Singer
"My experience is that as soon as people are old enough to know better, they don't know anything at all." Oscar Wilde
"If a nation values anything more than freedom, it will lose its freedom; and the irony of it is that if it is comfort or money that it values more, it will lose that too." W.Somerset Maugham
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