Office IT, from Mad Men to Now and Beyond
Sexist comments. Bourbon at 10 a.m. Lighting up a Pall Mall whenever you want. No, this isn’t the Mets locker room. It’s the way of life on the TV show Mad Men, and boy, did those guys at Sterling Cooper (the show’s fictional advertising firm) have it made. No one cared about cancer. All the secretaries and stewardesses had hourglass figures. And if you were Senior Partner Roger Sterling, you could even pinch one of their tushes with impunity.
But most of us who work in an office have noticed something else on Mad Men: the technology shift. Gone are those big, black phones. Also those IBM (IBM) typewriters. A copy machine was new technology then. If Don Draper, the firm’s creative director,ugg sales, was suddenly transported to today’s office, he would be shocked by how much of the technology that he used every day in 1963 is long gone.
And a whole new generation of technology helps you run Macs on Windows-based networks or even run Windows and Mac operating systems side by side. Investing in this stuff is becoming less taboo in the business world. The IBM typewriter moved over for the PC, and the PC is slowly but surely sharing space with Mac. And oh, if you’re going to buy a PC, make sure it’s not running Windows XP or Windows Vista. Because in just a few years all you’re going to see is Microsoft’s (MSFT) Windows 7 dominating the desktop&mdash,sell mbt shoes;or you’ll see Google’s (GOOG) Chrome or the open-source Linux system. In any case, today’s operating system will be yesterday’s news.