Brianna White

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Jul 30, 2019
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The underlying technologies that enterprises use to build and deliver their goods and services have undergone profound changes over the past 50 years.
The commercialization of computing in the 1960s through to the 1970s allowed for automation of manufacturing process—payrolls, billing, procurement, accounting, inventory management, and factory production lines.
The emergence of personal computers, private networks and then the internet in in the 1980s to mid-2000s led to a transformation of white-collar work outputs driven by commercial off-the-shelf systems including document and content management, office automation networks, email, intranets, and enterprise resource management.
The emergence of distributed processing and cloud-based development platforms by the mid-2000s turned technology into a service and allowed enterprises to pay-as-they-go in terms of infrastructure and application development, supported by a growing set of artificial intelligence tools and big data processing abilities that shifted business delivery to platform-based ecosystems driven by powerful network effects and behavioral algorithms.
Realizing how profoundly each period of technology innovation has changed commerce and the way that businesses deliver their goods and services is crucial as we stand on the verge of a new wave of tech innovation that has the potential to be perhaps the most disruptive yet.
Continue reading: https://www.marketsmedia.com/the-coming-web3-digital-asset-revolution/
 

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