Molim vas pažljivo pripremite i pustite na sajt.
Pustićemo i kao vest u broju.
Ko će?
Vesna Čarknajev
Direktorka
PC Press | Osmana Đikića 4 | 11000 Beograd | Srbija
Tel: +381 11 2765-533 | Mob: +381 63 234-801
E-mail: <mailto:vesna@pcpress.rs> vesna(a)pcpress.rs
From: Gordana Dragicevic [mailto:gordana.dragicevic@absoft.rs]
Sent: Wednesday, December 12, 2018 3:53 PM
To: vesna(a)pcpress.rs; nevenka(a)pcpress.rs
Subject: skup AB Softa
Draga Vesna,
Da li možete da objavite tekst koji Vam šaljem u prilogu emaila?
Takođe šaljem I 4 slike ako su potrebe 😊
Hvala puno
Goca
Gordana Dragićević
Marketing i komercijala
-----------------------------------
<mailto:gordana.dragicevic@absoft.rs> gordana.dragicevic(a)absoft.rs
<http://www.absoft.rs/> www.absoft.rs
-----------------------------------
Gospodara Vučića 21
11000 Beograd, SRBIJA
Tel
+381 11 3811 500
Fax
+381 11 3811 511
Mobil
+381 64 8027 502
-----------------------------------
Ova poruka i svi njeni prilozi, mogu da sadrže informacije koje su vlasništvo pošiljaoca ili primaoca i mogu biti kategorizovane kao poverljive informacije. Ako vi niste lice kome je ova poruka upućena, obaveštavamo Vas da niste ovlašćeni da informacije iz ove poruke čitate, koristite, objavljujete, prosleđujete ili kopirate bez saglasnosti pošiljaoca. Ako ste ovu poruku primili greškom, molimo Vas da odmah obavestite AB Soft d.o.o. na e-mail <mailto:office@absoft.rs> office(a)absoft.rs i poruku izbrišete iz vašeg sistema.
This electronic transmission is strictly confidential and intended solely for the addressee. If you are not the intended addressee, you must not disclose, copy or take any action in reliance of this transmission. If you have received this transmission in error it would be helpful if you could notify AB Soft ( <mailto:office@absoft.rs> office(a)absoft.rs) and contact as soon as possible.
---
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus
Možda zanimljivo...
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/12/10/obituaries/evelyn-berezin-dead.html
Evelyn Berezin, 93, Dies; Built the First True Word Processor
Dec. 10, 2018
Evelyn Berezin in 1976, when she was president of the Redactron Corporation, with Data Secretary, the first computerized word processor, which she designed and marketed.Barton Silverman/The New York Times
<https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/12/11/obituaries/11BEREZIN1/merlin_147…>
Evelyn Berezin in 1976, when she was president of the Redactron Corporation, with Data Secretary, the first computerized word processor, which she designed and marketed.Barton Silverman/The New York Times
Evelyn Berezin, a computer pioneer who emancipated many a frazzled secretary from the shackles of the typewriter nearly a half-century ago by building and marketing the first computerized word processor, died on Saturday in Manhattan. She was 93.
Marc Berezin, a nephew, confirmed her death, at the Mary Manning Walsh Home. He said she had learned that she had lymphoma several months ago but had chosen to forgo treatment.
In an age when computers were in their infancy and few women were involved in their development, Ms. Berezin (pronounced BEAR-a-zen) not only designed the first true word processor; in 1969, she was also a founder and the president of the Redactron Corporation, a tech start-up on Long Island that was the first company exclusively engaged in manufacturing and selling the revolutionary machines.
To secretaries, who constituted 6 percent of the American work force then, Redactron word processors arrived in an office like a trunk of magic tricks, liberating users from the tyranny of having to retype pages marred by bad keystrokes and the monotony of copying pages for wider distribution. The machines were bulky, slow and noisy, but they could edit, delete, and cut and paste text.
Modern word processors, which appear as programs on computers, long ago simplified the tasks of authors, journalists and other writers — sometimes after misgivings over the risk of surrendering to a future of dystopian technology — but became so efficient in offices that they killed off the need for most of the old-fashioned secretarial skills Ms. Berezin was trying to enhance.
“I’m embarrassed to tell you that I never thought of it — it never entered my mind” that the word processor might endanger women’s jobs, Ms. Berezin said in an interview for this obituary in 2017. Though she was not an ardent feminist, she said, her first ad for the Redactron word processor was placed in Ms. magazine in 1971, hailing “the death of the dead-end secretary.”
Ms. Berezin called her computer the Data Secretary. It was 40 inches high, the size of a small refrigerator, and had no screen for words to trickle across. Its keyboard and printer was an I.B.M. Selectric Typewriter with a rattling print head the size of a golf ball. The device had 13 semiconductor chips, some of which Ms. Berezin designed, and programmable logic to drive its word-processing functions.
Later versions of Redactron word processors came with monitor screens for text, separate printers, greater memory caches, smaller consoles, faster processing speeds and more programmed features to smooth the writing and editing tasks.
With law firms and corporate offices as its main clients, Redactron sold some 10,000 machines for $8,000 each before running into financial problems after seven years of independent operation. The company was sold in 1976 to <http://www.computinghistory.org.uk/det/8226/Burroughs-Corporation/> the Burroughs Corporation, and Ms. Berezin joined the parent company as president of its Redactron division, a post she held until 1980. She then went on to careers in venture capital and consulting.
Ms. Berezin’s Data Secretary did one thing: it processed words. At first it served as a godsend to human secretaries, but its more sophisticated successors helped eliminate their jobs.Barton Silverman/The New York Times
<https://static01.nyt.com/images/2018/12/11/obituaries/11BEREZIN3/merlin_147…>
Ms. Berezin’s Data Secretary did one thing: it processed words. At first it served as a godsend to human secretaries, but its more sophisticated successors helped eliminate their jobs.Barton Silverman/The New York Times
Even in her Redactron heyday, Ms. Berezin was hardly alone in the word processing business. Her chief competitor, International Business Machines, made devices that relied on electronic relays and tapes, not semiconductor chips. I.B.M. soon caught up technologically and swamped the market in the 1970s and ′80s, pursued by a herd of brands like Osborne, Wang, Tandy and Kaypro.
But for a few years after Redactron started shipping its computerized word processors in September 1971, Ms. Berezin was a lioness of the young tech industry, featured in magazine and news articles as an adventurous do-it-herself polymath with the logical mind of an engineer, the curiosity of an inventor and the entrepreneurial skills of a C.E.O.
In a 1972 profile in The New York Times, the business writer Leonard Sloane wrote: “Miss Berezin, a serious, soft-spoken individual, nevertheless talks at times like a systems engineer (which she is), a sales executive (which she is) and a proponent of a sophisticated product (which she is). She is also obviously a woman on the senior level of a field where her sex are still a rarity at any level.”
Early in her career, Ms. Berezin designed numerous single-purpose computer systems. They calculated the firing ranges of big guns, controlled the distribution of magazines, kept accounts for corporations and automated banking transactions. She also claimed credit for the world’s first computerized airline reservations system.
“Why is this woman not famous?” the British writer and entrepreneur Gwyn Headley asked <http://fotolibrarian.fotolibra.com/?p=466> in a 2010 blog post.
“Without Ms. Berezin,” he added enthusiastically, “there would be no Bill Gates, no Steve Jobs, no internet, no word processors, no spreadsheets; nothing that remotely connects business with the 21st century.”
Credit for her early achievements does appear to have faded with time, perhaps under the obliterating speed of technological change, the greater notice paid to her corporate competitors, and the tendency of the tech world to diminish the accomplishments of women.
Although Ms. Berezin was inducted into the <http://www.witi.com/halloffame/> Women in Technology International Hall of Fame in Los Angeles in 2011, Matthew G. Kirschenbaum noted in “Track Changes: A Literary History of Word Processing” (2016), “she remains a relatively unknown and underappreciated figure, with nowhere near the stature of other women who played significant roles in computer science and the computer industry and have since been recognized by historians.”
Evelyn Berezin was born in the Bronx on April 12, 1925, to Sam and Rose (Berman) Berezin, Jewish immigrants from Russia. Her father was a furrier, her mother a seamstress. Evelyn and her brothers, Sidney and Nelson, grew up in an apartment under elevated tracks in the East Bronx. In her bedroom, she read science fiction in Astounding Stories magazine as subway trains roared past endlessly.
A precocious student at public elementary and junior high schools, she graduated at 15 from Christopher Columbus High School in the Bronx. She attended night classes at Hunter College, which was all women at the time, and at Brooklyn Polytechnic Institute, where she transferred from Hunter under a World War II City University program that permitted the admission of women to an all-male school for the study of calculus and other specialized subjects. She earned a degree in physics at New York University in 1946 and completed coursework for a doctorate in physics at N.Y.U., but left in 1950 before finishing her doctoral experiments.
<https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/obituaries/notable-deaths-business…>
<https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/obituaries/notable-deaths-business…>
<https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/obituaries/notable-deaths-business…> Notable Deaths 2018: Business and Economics
<https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/obituaries/notable-deaths-business…> A memorial to those who lost their lives in 2018
<https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/obituaries/notable-deaths-business…> Aug. 3, 2018
She married Dr. Israel Wilenitz, a chemical engineer, in 1951, but kept her maiden name for professional purposes. They had no children. He died in 2003. No immediate family members survive.
Ms. Berezin joined the Electronic Computer Corporation in 1951 as the only woman in a shop of engineers in Brooklyn. “They said to me, ‘Design a computer,’ ” she was quoted as saying in the 1972 Times profile. “I had never seen one before. Hardly anyone else had. So I just had to figure out how to do it. It was a lot of fun — when I wasn’t terrified.”
One of her early computers was designed for the Defense Department to make range calculations for artillery pieces and other big guns to hit their targets. When Underwood Typewriter bought Electronic Computer in 1957 and discontinued computer development, Ms. Berezin moved to Teleregister, a Connecticut company, where she designed an office computer that kept books and accounts, and another that automated a national banking system.
She later developed what she called the world’s first computerized airline reservations system, for United Airlines, linking customers, airplane seat availabilities and airline offices in 60 cities with one-second response times.
Some historians say that American Airlines, using I.B.M computers and a system called Sabre (Semi-Automated Business Research Environment), developed the first experimental airline reservation system in 1960. But Mr. Kirschenbaum, in “Track Changes,” wrote, “With Berezin’s assistance, Teleregister implemented the first automated airlines reservations system in the world (for United Airlines), predating the better-known Sabre system by at least a year.”
In 1968, Ms. Berezin began working on ideas for a true computer for word processing, using tiny chips, known as integrated circuits, or semiconductors, to record and retrieve keystrokes for text editing. Since 1964, I.B.M. had been making word processors using a Selectric Typewriter and a magnetic tape drive to save and retrieve keystrokes. The tape could be corrected and used to retype text, but since the machine lacked semiconductor chips, Ms. Berezin said, it was not a true computer.
By 1969, Ms. Berezin was far enough along in her design to act on it. She and two male colleagues, with $750,000 in capital, incorporated Redactron in an industrial park at Hauppauge, N.Y., on Long Island. Simultaneously, Intel and other companies were bringing semiconductor chips to fruition. Ms. Berezin used some of them, along with several semiconductors of her own design, in her first word processor.
>From 1980 to 1987, Ms. Berezin was the president of Greenhouse Management Company, a venture capital fund invested in early-stage high-technology companies. She later served on the boards of many tech companies and was a tech consultant.
Ms. Berezin held nine computer-related patents. Her Data Secretary is on display at the Computer History Museum in Mountain View, Calif.
As is often the case with labor-saving devices, the advent of her word processor played out in unpredictable ways — making secretarial work easier for a time but superfluous later, often to the dismay of male bosses.
“It became obvious to the men that they didn’t need their secretaries anymore,” Ms. Berezin said. “They could do most of it themselves. But we also learned that if there is anything a man hates, it is to give up his secretary.”
A version of this article appears in print on Dec. 11, 2018, on Page A25 of the New York edition with the headline: Evelyn Berezin, Computer Pioneer Who Built First Word Processor, Dies at 93. <http://www.nytreprints.com/> Order Reprints | <http://www.nytimes.com/pages/todayspaper/index.html> Today’s Paper | <https://www.nytimes.com/subscriptions/Multiproduct/lp8HYKU.html?campaignId=…> Subscribe
Sign up for Breaking News
Sign up to receive an email from The New York Times as soon as important news breaks around the world.
$1 a week, plus Cooking and Crossword on us. One day only.
Sent from my iPad 2018
Za objavu. Ko će?
Pozz
Vesna Čarknajev
Direktorka
PC Press | Osmana Đikića 4 | 11000 Beograd | Srbija
Tel: +381 11 2765-533 | Mob: +381 63 234-801
E-mail: <mailto:vesna@pcpress.rs> vesna(a)pcpress.rs
From: Tesla [mailto:Tesla@comtrade.com]
Sent: Wednesday, December 12, 2018 12:48 PM
To: Tesla <Tesla(a)comtrade.com>
Subject: Saopštenje za medije - Tesla Smartphone 6.4 Lite
Poštovani,
Kompanija Comtrade predstavila je novog člana svoje porodice pametnih
telefona - Tesla Smartphone 6.4 Lite. Ovaj uređaj kreiran je po meri
korisnika koji su u potrazi za pouzdanim i dugotrajnim telefonom iz srednjeg
cenovnog ranga, a uz to su im na raspolaganju i napredne funkcije, uz
jednostavnu i laku upotrebu.
U prilogu možete pronaći saopštenje za medije i specifikaciju ovog uređaja,
a fotografije za objavu u visokoj rezoluciji se nalaze na linku u nastavku:
https://seafile.comtrade.com/d/04704235cf4f4ceda9ca/
Za sve dodatne informacije, stojim na raspolaganju.
Srdačan pozdrav, Lana
Lana Mažić
Public Relations and Advertising Manager
T: +381 11 201 5502 M: +381 65 201 5502
A: Savski nasip 7, Belgrade, Serbia
<http://www.comtrade.com/> WEB |
<https://www.linkedin.com/company/comtrade-group> LIn |
<http://www.twitter.com/comtradegroup> TW |
<http://www.facebook.com/comtrade> FB |
<http://www.youtube.com/comtradegroup> YT |
<http://www.instagram.com/comtrade> IG
---
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus
Za objavu
Pozdrav
_________________
Filip Majkić
Executive Editor
Digital Media Manager
PC Press | Osmana Đikića 4 | 11000 Beograd | Srbija
Tel: +381 69 311-78-22
E-mail: <mailto:filip@pcpress.rs> filip(a)pcpress.rs
From: Tesla <Tesla(a)comtrade.com>
Sent: Wednesday, December 12, 2018 12:48 PM
To: Tesla <Tesla(a)comtrade.com>
Subject: Saopštenje za medije - Tesla Smartphone 6.4 Lite
Poštovani,
Kompanija Comtrade predstavila je novog člana svoje porodice pametnih
telefona – Tesla Smartphone 6.4 Lite. Ovaj uređaj kreiran je po meri
korisnika koji su u potrazi za pouzdanim i dugotrajnim telefonom iz srednjeg
cenovnog ranga, a uz to su im na raspolaganju i napredne funkcije, uz
jednostavnu i laku upotrebu.
U prilogu možete pronaći saopštenje za medije i specifikaciju ovog uređaja,
a fotografije za objavu u visokoj rezoluciji se nalaze na linku u nastavku:
https://seafile.comtrade.com/d/04704235cf4f4ceda9ca/
Za sve dodatne informacije, stojim na raspolaganju.
Srdačan pozdrav, Lana
Lana Mažić
Public Relations and Advertising Manager
T: +381 11 201 5502 M: +381 65 201 5502
A: Savski nasip 7, Belgrade, Serbia
<http://www.comtrade.com/> WEB |
<https://www.linkedin.com/company/comtrade-group> LIn |
<http://www.twitter.com/comtradegroup> TW |
<http://www.facebook.com/comtrade> FB |
<http://www.youtube.com/comtradegroup> YT |
<http://www.instagram.com/comtrade> IG
Objavite ako mislite da treba. Poražavajući rezultati. Zadruga na prvom
mestu !!!
_________
Ksenija Kostić
Marketing
<http://www.pcpress.rs/> www.pcpress.rs
PC Press | Osmana Đikića 4 | 11000 Beograd | Srbija
Tel: +381 11 2080-220 | Mob: +381 63 125 00 26
From: Nada Puresevic [mailto:Nada.Puresevic@grayling.com]
Sent: 12 December 2018 10:21
Subject: Najpretraživaniji pojmovi na Google pretraživaču u 2018. godini u
Srbiji
Poštovani,
Kompanija Google danas je objavila rezultate godišnjeg izveštaja
najpretraživanijih termina u 2018. godini, nudeći jedinstvenu perspektivu o
najznačajnijim momentima i trendovima u Srbiji.
Opširnije saopštenje se nalazi u prilogu, a video možete pogledati ovde
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6aFdEhEZQjE> .
Pozdrav,
Nada
Nada Purešević
Account Manager
-
Takovska 6/6
11000 Belgrade
Serbia
T +381 (0)11 3234198
M +381 (0) 64 6428038
<mailto:nada.puresevic@grayling.com> nada.puresevic(a)grayling.com
@graylingpr
<http://grayling.com/> grayling.com
Ako niste već dobili…
Za objavu!
Vesna Čarknajev
Direktorka
PC Press | Osmana Đikića 4 | 11000 Beograd | Srbija
Tel: +381 11 2765-533 | Mob: +381 63 234-801
E-mail: <mailto:vesna@pcpress.rs> vesna(a)pcpress.rs
From: Ivan Arandjelovic [mailto:yourlink.belgrade@gmail.com]
Sent: Monday, December 10, 2018 10:58 AM
To: undisclosed-recipients:
Subject: Novi HP Education Edition PC modeli za bržu digitalizaciju učenja u Srbiji - Saopštenje za medije
Poštovani,
Kompanija HP predstavila je svoje nove uređaje i rešenja u oblasti obrazovanja, uključujući HP ProBook x360 11 G3 Education Edition, HP ProBook x360 11 G4 Education Edition, HP Stream 11 Pro G5 i HP School Pack 3.5.
Reč je o računarima i softverskim paketima koji su dizajnirani tako da omoguće i ohrabre dalju digitalnu transformaciju učenja kroz čitav niz inovacija i poboljšanja. Zanimljiv podatak je to da će ovi novi uređaji i rešenja biti dostupni u Srbiji već tokom narednih nekoliko meseci.
Tim povodom, u prilogu ovog mejla šaljemo vam saopštenje za novinare kompanije HP, kao i nekoliko zanimljivih fotografija, uz molbu da ovu informaciju prenesete u svom mediju.
Unapred hvala i srdačan pozdrav,
Ivan Aranđelović
PR savetnik
---
This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software.
https://www.avast.com/antivirus