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Bleeding edge of technology
Bleeding edge of technology






bleeding edge of technology
  1. #BLEEDING EDGE OF TECHNOLOGY SOFTWARE#
  2. #BLEEDING EDGE OF TECHNOLOGY PC#
  3. #BLEEDING EDGE OF TECHNOLOGY WINDOWS#

And will drive the development of newer and better technologies the manage taxes. This will drive additional customers to tax professionals – many of whom have done their own taxes in previous years.

#BLEEDING EDGE OF TECHNOLOGY SOFTWARE#

This means that tax software will become more sophisticated with each revision, in the battle to keep current. Forget about tax simplification – all of the indicators point to a tax system that is more difficult to keep pace with, tax returns that are more complicated, and tax compliance measures that require more careful attention. Tax technology will resurge as a major part of accounting. Remember, touch screen monitors have been around for many years now, and have already failed to capture the attention of users in any significant way. Imagine having to clean a surface twenty times that size every few minutes. Smartphone users will tell you that touch screens are already a nuisance in that market. And until you realize that every tough on the screen means a greasy fingerprint that requires cleaning to see the screen properly. Until you realize that the screens are more fragile than other types of screen. Sure, touch screens are amazing and cool and the wave of the future.

#BLEEDING EDGE OF TECHNOLOGY PC#

The PC will no longer be the top of the tech pyramid, but will begin to emerge as the bridging device – and thus still indispensable. Bigger screens, touch screens, more USB ports and better integration with devices at both ends of the spectrum. The desktop PC is not dead, it’s just evolving to take the middle ground between the smartphone/tablet markets at one end and the high-def television and video markets at the other. If I had a dollar for every tech pundit who had predicted the death of the PC computer, I would be retired by now. That AOL mail account someday may mark you as a savvy Internet user once again. But ever so slowly, the company has rebuilt itself around its content and its communities, and in 20133 will begin to re-emerge as a serious contender to some of the market leaders. For a company that is barely two decades old, AOL has been many things to many people. Voice-command systems will be the first battle, and this will be a free-for-all in hands-free computing, with the battleground being the center console of your automobile.ĪOL will make a comeback. The only way for anyone to advance is to open a new front, and that’s slowly happening inside the family automobile. Much like the trenches of World War I and the Maginot Line. Apple dominant, Google holding its own, with an occasional assault by Microsoft and its allies.

bleeding edge of technology

These are the tech wars for dominance, now comfortably settled into familiar trenches. So what’s in store for 2013? Here are our predictions: On the more subdued end of the industry, companies continued to see solid profits cyber-security became more critical and software got notably better – with smaller code, better user interfaces and tighter integration.

#BLEEDING EDGE OF TECHNOLOGY WINDOWS#

On the flashy end of the business, Apple products drove the company to the top of the stock markets Blackberry died a grisly death and Microsoft pushed out yet another Windows operating system. Perhaps the best way to define technology in 2012 is that it was a balance of extremes.








Bleeding edge of technology