Despite the fact that I carry a yellow legal pad everywhere I go to track to-dos and action items, I otherwise live a pretty paper-free existence. And while it wasn't especially practical to have a ...
Get your news from a source that’s not owned and controlled by oligarchs. Sign up for the free Mother Jones Daily. Back when I was in the document imaging business, we joked that the paperless office ...
Long predicted, the paperless office is still a myth. Although paper usage has been reduced in some organizations, it has increased in others. Today's PCs make it easy to churn out documents. As one ...
You have no excuse for being buried under paper these days. The tools to digitize most or all of your pile are readily at hand and very affordable. We’re not exactly a paperless society yet, but this ...
Since its prediction in a 1975 BusinessWeek article, the paperless office has proven to be the stuff of fantasy. In the last 10 years, office paper consumption has barely dipped in North America and ...
The evolution of the digital workplace is creating new challenges and generating new questions about optimizing employee productivity. The office has transitioned from rigid and fixed to remote, ...
Sick of the mountains of paper stacking up in your inbox? You’ve probably heard about the joys of having a paperless office, maybe even thought about setting one up, but didn’t know how. Well, here’s ...
Ever since BusinessWeek popularized the term in 1975 with George Pake’s–founder of Xerox’s Palo Alto Research Center–prediction that computers would cause the demise of printing. Still, U.S.
Talk of an all-digital future where paper is nothing but a distant memory has been around for decades. But thanks to the rise of cloud applications and devices that keep everyone constantly connected, ...
The average office worker uses 10,000 sheets of copy paper each year according to Reduce.org. Multiply that by the number of employees you have, and you can see how going paperless could save your ...
THE PAPERLESS OFFICE....John Quiggin says the death of the phrase "paperless office" came in 2001, with the release of a book by Abigail Sellen and Richard Harper called The Myth of the Paperless ...