Furniture: Difference between revisions

11 bytes added ,  16 November 2022
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{{caps|'''[[Legal ops]]'''}}: YES! Does it? <br>
{{caps|'''[[Legal ops]]'''}}: YES! Does it? <br>
{{caps|'''[[JC]]'''}} (''pauses''): Um, yes. Sure it does.<br>
{{caps|'''[[JC]]'''}} (''pauses''): Um, yes. Sure it does.<br>
'''Document Comparison Vendor''': Wait, what? No it d —<br>
{{caps|'''Sofware Vendor'''}}: Wait, ''what''? No, it d —<br>
{{caps|'''[[JC]]'''}} (''aside''): Do you ''want'' this contract? <br>
{{caps|'''[[JC]]'''}} (''to SV, sotto voce''): Do you ''want'' this contract? <br>
{{caps|'''[[Legal ops]]'''}}: What was that? <br>
{{caps|'''[[Legal ops]]'''}}: What was that? <br>
{{caps|'''[[JC]]'''}} and '''Document Comparison Vendor''' ''(in unison)'': Nothing. <br>
{{caps|'''[[JC]]'''}} and {{caps|'''Sofware Vendor'''}} ''(in unison)'': Nothing. <br>
}}
}}
{{quote|Technology should be part of the everyday. We should see it and touch it and use it all the time.}}{{Author|Stewart Brand}} has a great expression for this kind of technology: the “invisible present”. The problem is that technology which does integrate seamlessly into our lives doesn’t look like technology for very long. Email. Web browsers. Smartphones. Wikipedia. Google
{{quote|Technology should be part of the everyday. We should see it and touch it and use it all the time.}}{{Author|Stewart Brand}} has a great expression for this kind of technology: the “invisible present”. The problem is that technology which does integrate seamlessly into our lives doesn’t look like technology for very long. Email. Web browsers. Smartphones. Wikipedia. Google