[TCP] Documentation Delivery: Print or CD?
Susan W Gallagher
susanwg at gmail.com
Fri Nov 30 08:53:31 MST 2007
True. At my previous gig, we delivered training materials for both customer
training classes and internal sales seminars on jump drives. The nice thing
about a jump drive is that it isn't going to get thrown away. If a
salesperson is packing a suitcase to go home from a sales seminar and there
isn't enough room in a suitcase or briefcase, paper docs will probably get
left behind; not so with a jump drive.
-Sue Gallagher
On 11/30/07, Kelly McDaniel <kmcdaniel at pavtech.com> wrote:
>
> Plus, and no one's mentioned this yet, we now have cheap storage. For
> example, I bought a Sandisk 512mb jump drive for about $80 a couple of
> years ago. This year, I bought a Sandisk 2gig drive for $31/landed
> FedEx...and I believe that Sandisk is one of the high-priced lines!
>
> The point I'm trying to make is that I can carry my entire library of
> docs (~4 thousand pages), plus my docs source, plus all my personal
> stuff on my jump drive. As for size, it's like my new digital camera, a
> little too small. True, it requires power, but so does a book, unless
> you read it outdoors during the day.
>
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