Word: keyboard
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Dates: during 1980-1989
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...revolution paper before he will even look at them. Without a hint of apology, he explains that he will not trust anything he reads on green-and-white printouts. At the headquarters of a large Atlanta company, the chairman of the board boasts that he has never touched a keyboard, and that neither he nor any of his right-hand men have a computer in their office. Explains an underling: "For these guys in their 50s, computers just aren't part of their ethic." Such an attitude is now widespread. "The idea of an executive sitting in his office...
...time, the typical middle-aged corporate executive is gnawing on his pencils and growling for the personal computer to remain outside the door of his executive suite. They are found everywhere today, from dentists' offices to living rooms, but many top business managers simply do not want a keyboard and video-display terminal cluttering up their mahogany desktops-almost as if the machines were aesthetically distasteful. Says John Thompson, a vice president of Index Systems, a management consulting firm: "There is a widespread assumption among executives that computers are something to be put in the basement, where they...
...society and determine pay based on that." What once was a cry for "equal pay for equal work" will, accordingly, become a demand for "equal pay for comparable work." How this will be measured and worked out is still a mystery?how does an hour at the computer keyboard prorate against the same time spent in the typing pool...
Programming, or software, is lagging behind the portable-computer revolution, however. Easy-to-use programs are hard to come by, limiting the utility of the most advanced portable computer and frustrating the average user. In recognition of this problem, the keyboard of the new IXO portable terminal has buttons marked YES, NO and-an industry first-DON'T KNOW. There is also a button marked HELP...
Philip DeGuere is a television producer, a home-computer aficionado and a very brave man. Working with a Virginia-based computer data bank called the Source, DeGuere devised a way in which a Source subscriber can punch in a code and use his computer keyboard to sound off on the television program he is watching. Every man a critic! Bring back Lou Grant! "People want to talk back to their television sets," says the Source's Mike Rawl. DeGuere has already used his hookup for electronic feedback on Hill Street Blues and his own detective adventure, Simon & Simon...