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The Register, November 2, 2011 By Timothy Prickett Morgan
If IT managers had had it their way decades ago, we would have never been allowed our own personal computers. The whole idea of giving end-users their own computing resources runs counter to the philosophy that data processing is a centralised function best left to professionals. PCs took off, and dragged IT departments into the client/server revolution, precisely because of this high-priest attitude.
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