Goodbye, Twitter Trump! And Other Predictions for 2021

The coronavirus has forced the kind of work experimentation that would have taken a decade otherwise.

image from article

By Kara Swisher 
Contributing Opinion Writer 
Dec. 31, 2020, 4:46 p.m. ET 

Excerpt: 

"The coronavirus has forced the kind of work experimentation that would have taken a decade to eventually happen: limiting business travel, cutting in-person office time, questioning every cost associated with the analog workplace. Technology is making doing business cheaper and more efficient and, as it has turned out, more productive. 

These changes have proved nearly useless and even dangerous when it comes to education, where physical presence is much more of an asset than we thought. More consideration will be put into how to make technology and schooling mesh better and how to provide students with the kind of experience that they are not getting, as well as a bigger focus on universal connectivity for those who are without it."

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