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  • Atricle Dump - How Touching

    Are You Missing Out Doubling Or Trebling Your Profits?
    This bulletin is not about choosing a name for your new business, its not even about developing business plans and it certainly is not about choosing to be incorporated, a partnership or a sole trader. There are dozens of resources about that.This is all about that giant step from surviving in business to success in your chosen niche.It is one thing getting a business up and running but doi
    browser, and object of lust all rolled into one? ) As with the Mac, Apple took great pains to insulate the user from the technology by making sure the technology drove the user experience. All applications in the iPhone are driven through the touch screen, and by the absence of a physical keypad, all future applications will do the same.

    Would HP or any PC vendor dare to go that far? IDC thinks so. IDC notes that consumer products may now be the technology leader in terms of the direction in which innovation happens. This is a reversal

    Business Yoga
    Have you ever talked to a service provider and thought they were wrong for you? Then you talked to your colleague and they raved about them. So you went down the path of hiring them and found them to be the “service provider from hell”. This is not an unfamiliar scenario.Business styles vary from company to company and within the company, from person to person. We tend to check out our friends bef
    I love when history repeats itself. A new round of suckers arrive to lay wagers against.

    When the backs of my ears were still damp and Lotus 1-2-3 was the cool, new technology, HP came close to popularizing touch screens for PCs. Their HP-150 -- an all-in-one PC with an unfortunately tiny screen and a truly innovative way of engineering a no-touch touch screen -- was thrust into the market. The HP-150 had a run longer than most anyone predicted, and as best as I can tell not at all because of the touch screen.

    The problem was not in the engineering (well, aside from the fact fat fingered troglodytes had a miserable experience when attempting to use the tiny 9" touch screen). It was that very few applications needed a touch screen, and with the HP-150 being the only corporate desktop being shipped with that capability, few application vendors bothered to explore the potential.

    Which made last week interesting in as much as HP appears to be at it again, though Apple is getting it right, and IDC thinks HP might learn something from Apple (they sure missed the boat when Job and Woz tried to teach them the first time).

    At CES, HP was showing off a new touch screen Vista Media PC. But the interface seems to have few uses beyond launching applications and within a few provided point applications. The interface appear to be a half breed bastard child of a common touch screen and Microsoft's tablet PC controls. HP may well have more success than with the ancient HP-150 in as much as many of the interfaces are embedded Windows itself, and thus some applications will "work" without additional application coding.

    But as an application does little well with a mouse until the assumption of the presence of a mouse is made by the programmer, so too will applications lack sophisticated usability until a touch screen is assumed. If HP's new touch screen is not an open standard, odds are nobody will invest the software development required to take advantage of it.

    Apple on the other hand made a touch screen a reality on their iPhone personal .... "device" (what do you call a gizmo that is your MP3 player, cell phone, and PDA, portable web browser, and object of lust all rolled into one? ) As with the Mac, Apple took great pains to insulate the user from the technology by making sure the technology drove the user experience. All applications in the iPhone are driven through the touch screen, and by the absence of a physical keypad, all future applications will do the same.

    Would HP or any PC vendor dare to go that far? IDC thinks so. IDC notes that consumer products may now be the technology leader in terms of the direction in which innovation happens. This is a reversal

    What to Include in Your Cleaning Bid Packet
    When bidding on janitorial services in a commercial setting, it is necessary to put together a "Bid Packet" to present to your prospective client. Many small businesses seeking cleaning services do not know what to expect when receiving a bid, or their experience has been receiving a single page bid, which is not very impressive. When you present a nicely packaged proposal, you've just increased your chances
    in the engineering (well, aside from the fact fat fingered troglodytes had a miserable experience when attempting to use the tiny 9" touch screen). It was that very few applications needed a touch screen, and with the HP-150 being the only corporate desktop being shipped with that capability, few application vendors bothered to explore the potential.

    Which made last week interesting in as much as HP appears to be at it again, though Apple is getting it right, and IDC thinks HP might learn something from Apple (they sure missed the boat when Job and Woz tried to teach them the first time).

    At CES, HP was showing off a new touch screen Vista Media PC. But the interface seems to have few uses beyond launching applications and within a few provided point applications. The interface appear to be a half breed bastard child of a common touch screen and Microsoft's tablet PC controls. HP may well have more success than with the ancient HP-150 in as much as many of the interfaces are embedded Windows itself, and thus some applications will "work" without additional application coding.

    But as an application does little well with a mouse until the assumption of the presence of a mouse is made by the programmer, so too will applications lack sophisticated usability until a touch screen is assumed. If HP's new touch screen is not an open standard, odds are nobody will invest the software development required to take advantage of it.

    Apple on the other hand made a touch screen a reality on their iPhone personal .... "device" (what do you call a gizmo that is your MP3 player, cell phone, and PDA, portable web browser, and object of lust all rolled into one? ) As with the Mac, Apple took great pains to insulate the user from the technology by making sure the technology drove the user experience. All applications in the iPhone are driven through the touch screen, and by the absence of a physical keypad, all future applications will do the same.

    Would HP or any PC vendor dare to go that far? IDC thinks so. IDC notes that consumer products may now be the technology leader in terms of the direction in which innovation happens. This is a reversal

    Managing Change - Trust, Integrity and Change
    Imagine sitting in an HR Managers office, a Director of Human Resources discussing a change project gone bad and he tells you, “I’m glad I travel, I hate people coming in to my office.” That actually happened on one project and the guy worked for a big, glamour Company and was in charge of a large division of the outfit. As a partner of mine said when I was relating the story, “He must be the Director of Non
    when Job and Woz tried to teach them the first time).

    At CES, HP was showing off a new touch screen Vista Media PC. But the interface seems to have few uses beyond launching applications and within a few provided point applications. The interface appear to be a half breed bastard child of a common touch screen and Microsoft's tablet PC controls. HP may well have more success than with the ancient HP-150 in as much as many of the interfaces are embedded Windows itself, and thus some applications will "work" without additional application coding.

    But as an application does little well with a mouse until the assumption of the presence of a mouse is made by the programmer, so too will applications lack sophisticated usability until a touch screen is assumed. If HP's new touch screen is not an open standard, odds are nobody will invest the software development required to take advantage of it.

    Apple on the other hand made a touch screen a reality on their iPhone personal .... "device" (what do you call a gizmo that is your MP3 player, cell phone, and PDA, portable web browser, and object of lust all rolled into one? ) As with the Mac, Apple took great pains to insulate the user from the technology by making sure the technology drove the user experience. All applications in the iPhone are driven through the touch screen, and by the absence of a physical keypad, all future applications will do the same.

    Would HP or any PC vendor dare to go that far? IDC thinks so. IDC notes that consumer products may now be the technology leader in terms of the direction in which innovation happens. This is a reversal

    How To Get Easy Grants for Small Businesses from the Government
    Several states have small business government grants. These are not offered by the federal government but a number of state-run development agencies provide free government grants. The states that offer these are Kansas, Nebraska, New Hampshire, New Mexico, and Utah. Other states provide financing through loans with incentives to those who want to start a small business rather than free government grants.coding.

    But as an application does little well with a mouse until the assumption of the presence of a mouse is made by the programmer, so too will applications lack sophisticated usability until a touch screen is assumed. If HP's new touch screen is not an open standard, odds are nobody will invest the software development required to take advantage of it.

    Apple on the other hand made a touch screen a reality on their iPhone personal .... "device" (what do you call a gizmo that is your MP3 player, cell phone, and PDA, portable web browser, and object of lust all rolled into one? ) As with the Mac, Apple took great pains to insulate the user from the technology by making sure the technology drove the user experience. All applications in the iPhone are driven through the touch screen, and by the absence of a physical keypad, all future applications will do the same.

    Would HP or any PC vendor dare to go that far? IDC thinks so. IDC notes that consumer products may now be the technology leader in terms of the direction in which innovation happens. This is a reversal

    How Do You Want To Be Rewarded On The Job? Be In The Drivers Seat
    Gone are the days when a pat on the back for a job well done or a gold watch after 25 years of service were enough to keep employees happy , productive and in the end profitable.Different employees need to be rewarded in different ways. You may wish to rewarded in different ways at different times of your life and career.For example if you are a person who is newly married and saving for a ho
    browser, and object of lust all rolled into one? ) As with the Mac, Apple took great pains to insulate the user from the technology by making sure the technology drove the user experience. All applications in the iPhone are driven through the touch screen, and by the absence of a physical keypad, all future applications will do the same.

    Would HP or any PC vendor dare to go that far? IDC thinks so. IDC notes that consumer products may now be the technology leader in terms of the direction in which innovation happens. This is a reversal of fate from the Bad Old Days when expensive technology created for IT slowly commoditized to fit the budgets of home users. Today costs are so low that the mass market drives innovation (because there are a lot more iPod buyers than mainframe buyers), and some consumer electronics innovations leak up to IT.

    In both cases, the driver is clear: the application comes first. Regardless of the niche, the interaction of the user with the application -- be it ERP or MP3 -- is paramount. Now if HP could just afford to hire Steve Jobs back ...

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