Archive for the ‘Free Software’ Category

CPE Webinar November 2, 2022: The Nuts and Bolts of Building Your Small Firm’s Ideal Tech Stack – CPAPracticeAdvisor.com

If youre running a smaller tax and accounting firm, you probably dont run your business the same way large firms do. Your tech stack is probably more focused on streamlining workflows, improving project tracking, and finding solutions for customer collaboration. And while thats great for building a flexible and responsive accounting firm, it also means that your firm is less likely to use data analytics tools to grow your business which means youre missing out.

A small practice incorporating the right strategies and tech-enabled services can set its clients up for success and the firm up for big-time growth. But how do you do it?

In this webinar, our small firm technology experts Georgia Smith and Stephanie Plaza will cover:

Program level: Basic (no prerequisites required)Field of Study:Information TechnologyReceive 1 hour of free CPE credit for participating in this live webcast.

Presented by

Georgia Smith is a product manager for Wolters Kluwer Tax & Accounting North America and has over 25 years of experience in tax preparation. Georgia owns and manages a tax preparation and bookkeeping business that serves individuals, small businesses, and small non-profits.

The insights that Georgia gains into the pain points of the small tax and accounting business owner helps guide her work at Wolters Kluwer, where she focuses on supporting small firms and creating the vision and strategy for the ATX product line.

Stephanie Plaza is a technology product manager Wolters Kluwer Tax & Accounting North America. For over 10 years Stephanie has been helping small business grow in the tax preparation space starting out on the banking side and moving to tax software over 5 years ago. Stephanie is passionate about enhancing the tax compliance software to help her customers get more work done faster and driving cloud migration to support the technology shift to online products. When she isnt working Stephanie enjoys traveling with her husband and daughter and her active role on the board of a homeless shelter in her hometown of Easton, PA.

Gail Perry is the editor-in-chief of CPA Practice Advisor. A veteran of accounting journalism, she also speaks at many accounting events, trade shows, and webinars. Gail is the author of over 30 books (includingMint.comFor Dummies, The Idiots Guide to Introductory Accounting, and Surviving Financial Downsizing: A Practical Guide to Living Well on Less Income), and she maintains a small tax practice. Gail is a graduate of Indiana University where she earned a bachelors degree in journalism. She returned to school to study accounting at Illinois State University, earned her CPA, and worked for Deloitte in Chicago for several years as a state and local tax accountant. She has taught introductory accounting and personal finance courses, and she is a former computer applications instructor at the Indiana CPA Society. Gail is a member of the AICPAs PFS Credential Committee.

This FREE online webinar is a continuation of CPA Practice Advisors mission to provide unbiased, independent information on technologies available to practicing public accountants and tax professionals.

Special thanks to our sponsor for supporting this educational session:

Wolters Kluwer Tax & Accounting is a leading provider of software solutions and local expertise that helps tax, accounting, and audit professionals research and navigate complex regulations, comply with legislation, manage their businesses and advise clients with speed, accuracy, and efficiency so they maximize the impact they create for their clients. Our focus is giving tax and accounting professionals the ability to grow, manage and protect their business and their clients businesses in a fast-moving and ever-changing world. It means that firms can stay ahead of the pack, take advantage of new technologies, transform, and capitalize on new opportunities.

Wolters Kluwer Tax & Accounting is part of Wolters Kluwer (WKL), a global leader in professional information, software solutions, and services for the healthcare; tax and accounting; governance, risk and compliance; and legal and regulatory sectors. We help our customers make critical decisions every day by providing expert solutions that combine deep domain knowledge with advanced technology and services.

CPA Practice Advisor is registered with the National Association of State Boards of Accountancy (NASBA) as a sponsor of continuing professional education on the National Registry of CPE Sponsors. State boards of accountancy have final authority on the acceptance of individual courses for CPE credit. Complaints regarding registered sponsors may be submitted to the National Registry of CPE Sponsors through its website:https://www.nasbaregistry.org/. For more information regarding administrative policies please contact Isaac OBannon at iobannon@cpapracticeadvisor.com.

Originally posted here:
CPE Webinar November 2, 2022: The Nuts and Bolts of Building Your Small Firm's Ideal Tech Stack - CPAPracticeAdvisor.com

Apple introduces the powerful next-generation Apple TV 4K – Apple

October 18, 2022

PRESS RELEASE

Apple introduces the powerful next-generation AppleTV 4K

The strongest Apple TV yet features the A15 Bionic chip, adds HDR10+, and brings the best of Apple to the biggest screen in the home all at a new starting price

CUPERTINO, CALIFORNIAApple today announced the next generation of Apple TV 4K more powerful, entertaining, and affordable than ever, and offering impressive cinematic quality. Driven by the A15 Bionic chip that delivers faster performance and more fluid gameplay, the new Apple TV 4K features endless entertainment options for everyone to enjoy on the biggest screen in the home. HDR10+ support joins Dolby Vision on Apple TV 4K, so users can watch their favorite movies and TV shows in the best quality possible across more TVs.1 Running tvOS, the powerful and intuitive OS for the living room, and featuring the popular Siri Remote, Apple TV 4K simplifies the way users discover and enjoy their favorite content. Its seamless integration with other Apple devices and services magically transforms the living room in different ways for the entire family, while also adding convenience as a smart home hub.

The new Apple TV 4K is available in two configurations: Apple TV 4K (Wi-Fi), which offers 64GB of storage; and Apple TV 4K (Wi-Fi + Ethernet), which offers support for Gigabit Ethernet for fast networking and streaming, Thread mesh networking protocol to connect even more smart home accessories, and twice the storage for apps and games (128GB). Customers can order the new Apple TV 4K with Siri Remote today at a new starting price of $129, with availability beginning Friday, November 4.

Apple TV 4K is the ultimate way for Apple users to enjoy their favorite entertainment on the biggest screen in the home, and now it is more powerful than ever, said Bob Borchers, Apples vice president of Worldwide Product Marketing. The new Apple TV 4K is unlike anything else out there, given its seamless connection to other Apple devices, ease of use, and access to amazing Apple content. It offers something for everyone in the family to love.

A Cinematic Home Theater Experience

The next generation of Apple TV 4K is an entertainment powerhouse, bringing the best video and audio capabilities to the biggest screen in the home. At the heart of the new Apple TV 4K is A15 Bionic, making the device even more powerful and energy efficient. CPU performance is now up to 50 percent faster than the previous generation, delivering greater responsiveness, faster navigation, and snappier UI animations. GPU performance is now up to 30 percent faster than the previous generation for even smoother gameplay.

Apple TV 4K now supports HDR10+, in addition to Dolby Vision, expanding rich visual quality across more TVs, producing the eye-popping details and vibrant colors intended by content creators. Users can also enjoy a home theater experience with Dolby Atmos, Dolby Digital 7.1, or Dolby Digital 5.1 surround sound for immersive audio.2

With the Siri Remote, users enjoy a touch-enabled clickpad that provides speed, fluidity, and precise control to easily navigate the simple, elegant user interface of Apple TV.3 On the Apple TV app, customers can access award-winning series and films on Apple TV+, as well as over 100,000 movies and series to buy or rent, and direct premium subscriptions to popular streaming services.

Seamless Integration with the Apple Ecosystem

Apple TV 4K works seamlessly with other Apple devices, starting with a magical setup process with iPhone and effortless control at any time with the Apple TV Remote in Control Center. The deep integration of Apple hardware, software, and services with Apple TV 4K unlocks an unparalleled experience that brings the best of the Apple ecosystem to the living room.4

tvOS

This fall, new features coming to the Apple TV experience with tvOS 16 include updates to Siri that will make it even easier for customers to use their voice to control Apple TV and interact with the results.5 Siri on Apple TV features a complete redesign, and will be able to recognize each users voice, so they can easily access their movies, shows, music, games, and apps, and pick up where they left off. By using the Siri Remote and asking What should I watch? users can get tailored recommendations.

When wearing AirPods, users can say Hey Siri to search and enjoy a hands-free way to control Apple TV. Siri support on Apple TV has expanded to Chile, Finland, and South Africa, and will launch in Denmark, Luxembourg, and Singapore later this year, bringing Siri on Apple TV to 30 countries and regions.

With iCloud Shared Photo Library on Apple TV, everyone in the family will be able to enjoy everyones photos together on the big screen. Cross-device connectivity on Apple TV 4K will enable developers to integrate personalized experiences between their iPhone and Apple Watch apps with Apple TV.

Users can continue to enjoy SharePlay by starting a FaceTime session on iPhone or iPad and watching a TV show or movie on Apple TV to stay completely in sync ensuring everyone catches a movies dramatic reveal or a shows punchline at the same moment. With shared playback controls, including using the Siri Remote, anyone in the SharePlay session can play, pause, or jump ahead.

Apple TV 4K as a Smart Home Hub

As a home hub, Apple TV 4K securely connects to compatible smart home accessories, including HomeKit cameras, lights, shades, and more; allows the user to set scenes and control their smart home while away; and ensures that accessories can run automatically. Apple TV 4K is also an essential building block for Matter, the new smart home connectivity standard that enables a wide variety of accessories to work together seamlessly across platforms, helping to fulfill the true vision of a smart home.

When viewing a HomeKit camera, Apple TV users can control nearby accessories such as turning on the outdoor lights or display multiple cameras at the same time on the TV screen for a more complete view. In addition, HomeKit Secure Video uses the on-device intelligence of Apple TV 4K to privately analyze the video to detect people, animals, cars, and package deliveries.6

With Thread networking support, Apple TV 4K (Wi-Fi + Ethernet) connects compatible Thread-based smart home accessories reliably and securely.

Apple TV 4K and the Environment

The new Apple TV 4K is designed to minimize its impact on the environment, using nearly 30 percent less power than the previous generation while achieving more powerful performance.7 The efficiency gains of A15 Bionic eliminate the need for an internal fan, resulting in a more compact design and contributing to a 25 percent reduction in carbon footprint over the previous generation.

In a first for Apple TV, Apple TV 4K features 100 percent recycled gold in the plating of multiple printed circuit boards, which also include100 percent recycled tin in the solder. The thermal module is made with 80 percent recycled aluminum, whiletheenclosure ofthe Siri Remote includes100 percent recycled aluminum. Redesigned packaging removes the outer plastic wrap, andover 90 percent of packaging is fiber based, bringing Apple closer to its goal of completely removing plastic from all packaging by 2025. The Apple TV 4K lineup is free of mercury, BFRs, PVC, and beryllium.

Today, Apple is carbon neutral for global corporate operations, and by 2030, plans to be 100 percent carbon neutral across the entire manufacturing supply chains and all product life cycles. This means that every Apple device sold, from component manufacturing, assembly, transport, customer use, charging, all the way through recycling and material recovery, will have net-zero climate impact.

Pricing and Availability

Press Contacts

Bernadette Simpao

Apple

bsimpao@apple.com

(669) 227-9273

Apple Media Helpline

media.help@apple.com

(408) 974-2042

See more here:
Apple introduces the powerful next-generation Apple TV 4K - Apple

Microsoft extends Azure Hybrid benefit to some on-prem software – The Register

Microsoft last week extended its Azure Hybrid Benefit to some on-prem workloads.

As the software colossus explains in the Azure Hybrid Benefit FAQ, the scheme "lets you bring your existing on-premises Windows Server and SQL Server licences with active Software Assurance or subscriptions to Azure." Once you get to Azure, Microsoft offers better pricing for software licenses.

Last week Microsoft announced an "extension" of the Azure Hybrid Benefit so that "customers with Windows Server Software Assurance or a Cloud Solution Provider subscription will be able to use Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) on Windows Server and Azure Stack HCI in their own datacenters or edge infrastructure at no additional cost."

That reveals two shifts: the extension of the Azure Hybrid Benefit into on-prem and edge operations; and the giveaway of Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) on Windows Server and Azure Stack HCI. These are major changes.

Microsoft's rationale for the first shift is that AKS and Azure Stack HCI are hybrid cloud workloads, so the logic of the Azure Hybrid Benefit kind of mostly applies.

The reasoning behind the second is that adopting AKS or Azure Stack HCI will almost certainly be done in the context of modernizing applications and/or infrastructure. Discounting the platforms Microsoft wants you to migrate to is a transparent means of making alternatives more expensive.

Which is pricing-led marketing business as usual.

But Microsoft's announcement snuck in a mention of one other recent licensing change: the virtual core licensing option Windows Server, which made it far easier to acquire the OS to run in clouds.

Microsoft spun this "Flexible Virtualization Benefit" as delivering on customers' desires, but the reality was that the European Union was set to punish Microsoft for charging less for Windows Server in Azure than was possible when using the OS in rival clouds. Microsoft therefore added flexibility to licensing, but also dodged a likely lawsuit.

The company has now again shown how it can use licensing to advantage its own prospects, which was what got it into trouble with Europe in the first place.

Another element of last week's announcement also bears examination: namely the change that allows customers to redistribute Windows Container base images beyond their organization in a way that allows distribution of a complete containerized application.

As Microsoft explains, container images bundle files needed for an application into "a stack of layers that reside on the user's local machine or in a remote container registry." The architecture of Windows containers requires that the first layer of Windows container images must, by design, be a layer of Windows container base image. However, licenses prevented customers from distributing that Windows container base image outside their own organization.

The change means a Windows container base image can now be distributed to third parties.

This matters because it means Windows apps can be packaged as containers and shared with others. That gives Microsoft customers more reasons to consider refactoring their apps for containers perhaps even by using AKS, now that it's free to use under the Azure Hybrid Benefit.

Follow this link:
Microsoft extends Azure Hybrid benefit to some on-prem software - The Register

Seven stocks, including a software product company from mid-cap space, which have potential upside of more – Economic Times

ET screener powered by Refinitivs Stock Report Plus applies different algorithms & filters to all BSE and NSE stocks, and lists down stocks which fulfill the various criteria as specified into the algorithms & filters.

The list consists of stocks from mid-cap space from different sectors where there was an improvement in analysts' score on SR plus and their stock prices have also moved higher. This improvement in score along with rise in stock prices. Stock Reports Plus, powered by Refinitiv, for price targets of over 4,000 listed stocks along with detailed company analysis focusing on five key components - earnings, fundamentals, relative valuation, risk and

BY

Sumit Kukreja

ETMarkets.com

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Seven stocks, including a software product company from mid-cap space, which have potential upside of more - Economic Times

Cryptomania: The good, the bad, and the ugly – Brookings Institution

Throughout financial history, many speculative manias have been characterized by a repeated mix of basic ingredients: from the enthusiasm of uninformed investors motivated by disruptive innovations, the inevitable illusion of easy profits to the infallible reference to the paradigm shift that will supposedly sustain the momentum over time, often conveniently seasoned with abundant global liquidity.

All manias end in the same way, with a sharp correction that collapses prices like a house of cards as the classic narrative of Kindleberger (1978) and the more recent one of Reinhart and Rogoff (2009) pointed out. In a nutshell, its another case of greed negating fear until it is too late for anything but panic.

The recent saga of the crypto ecosystem reproduces these elements, enhanced by a techno-anarcho-libertarian stick-it-to-the-man attitude against the established two-tiered monetary and financial system. The search for the benefits of anonymitymainly against taxes and, occasionally, the lawand for complete decentralization in transactionstrying to get rid of noncompetitive fees of the financial industry and the seignorage of exploitative central bankstended to generate many elements of financial fragility, and, occasionally, outright fraud.

Triggered by the Feds monetary tightening and over a few weeks, the crypto debacle comprised a succession of dramatic events, including:

All that against the backdrop of a sell-off that printed, at the time of this writing, a vertiginous correction of roughly 66 percent from its November 2021 $3-trillion peak, after growing explosively in the bubbling pandemic years, courtesy of the oversized monetary and fiscal impulses in core economies. The collapse surprised both mom-and-pop savers and large professional investors alike, and promptedan open letter toCongress, signed by more than 1,500 technologists, urging the body to take a critical, skeptical approach toward industry claims that crypto-assets are an innovative technology that is unreservedly good.

So how good (or bad) are crypto assets for healthy financial development?

Since the introduction of bitcoin at the beginning of 2009, the number of cryptocurrencies has soared to some 15,000, although in many cases they are mere replicas with very low trading volumes in search of unwary investors (the top 20 crypto assets account for 90 percent of market capitalization). Alongside this proliferationand inefficient inherent fragmentation opposed to the needs of a sound payment systemunregulated activities such as loans and leverage, and new varieties (stablecoins) have emerged to address some of the most ostensible weaknesses of the first crypto assets.

While they currently represent less than 1 percent of the global financial market, and their interconnections with it are stillluckilyquite limited, the recent trend of explosive growth, if undeterred, could pose potential risks to financial stability, just as the tiny subprime market did in 2008. And this is true not just in emerging economies where the lack of monetary credibility and limited financial access can foster currency substitution and credit disintermediation or cryptoizationthe digital version of dollarization. In advanced economies, competition from the large technological platforms in the provision of digital means of payment could limit national monetary autonomy, lead to concentrated market structures as a result of network economies, and add to financial fragility as the append-only, irreversible nature of blockchain transactions makes the unwinding of system errorsessential to any payment systemalmost impossible.

More than a decade after its launch, bitcoin has so far failed in its original objective of establishing itself as a suitable substitute that fully fulfills the functions of money. Paradoxically, bitcoins original call to replace central bankswhich ensure price stability by elastically matching money demandwith a decentralized scheme based on a rigid supply of a unique cryptocurrency that replicates the barbarous relic logic of the gold standard and its deflationary bias may end up in hyperinflation due to the uncontrolled spread of competing cryptocurrencies.

Lacking intrinsic economic value, crypto prices are inherently volatile, as they are tied exclusively to the fluctuations of their demandthe opposite of what one would expect of a good unit of account. Moreover, because of their decentralized nature, their application cannot be escalated without inefficiently high fees, congestion problems, or security risks (the so called Buterins Trilemma). Finally, if massively adopted, they could generate an environmental disaster due to the energy-intensive proof-of-work of most crypto systems. Unsurprisingly, then, cryptos have so far failed to play a significant role as a reliable means of paymentwith the exception of informal, illegal, or criminal transactionsleaving them as a vehicle for die-hard speculators, herd investors, and institutional asset managers belatedly lured by their alleged diversification advantages, if not just by FOMO-inducing hype.

A priori, stablecoins are in a different class altogether, their main purpose being precisely to overcome the intractable volatility of conventional cryptocurrencies. Stablecoins come in two types. Type 1, algorithmic, is based on smart contracts that defend the peg by buying or selling it against other crypto assets in a scheme worryingly reminiscent of a Ponzi game, as the Terra-Luna fiasco vividly illustrated. Type 2, custodial, follows the principle of a traditional currency board (like Hong Kongs long-standing exchange rate arrangement): The supply -of coins- is fully matched by a stock of liquid investment-grade assets denominated in the peg currency, so that holders can readily exchange them one to one on demand. In principle, only the custodial type might earn the stable moniker, but how stable are stablecoins in reality?

Two conditions are needed for the scheme to work. The first one is fairly obvious: There are no substitutes for actual reserve assets, the backing should be real and easily verifiable. In practice this has not always been the case: For example, doubts about the backing of Tether last year led to the companys belated revelation that, indeed, less than half of the stock was actually backed by high quality and liquid assets (HQLA) like U.S. Treasurys, with the rest comprised of assets that could rapidly lose value under financial stress.

The second condition is more subtle and technical: Stablecoin deposits cannot be on-lent. If they are, part of these loans would go into new deposits, which could also be on-lent, multiplying the stock of crypto-denominated assets in excess of the original, fully backed supply of stablecoins, and exposing the whole scheme to a run that exceeds the stock of reserves (as in the collapse of Argentinas currency board in 2001).

Now, if a stable stablecoin cannot be on-lenta condition that we have elsewhere called the stablecoin paradoxand merely represents a digital avatar of a stock of liquid reserves denominated in the peg currencyand leaving aside the less than virtuous role of facilitating illegal activities: What explains their popularity and their relatively large turnover? Stablecoins are mainly used as a vehicle currency to support a wide range of endogamic DeFi products and services, posting collateral for other crypto operations or as insurance against hackers, lost keys, smart contract failures, and other cyber mishaps, without much contact with the real economy.

Add to that the absurd valuations, the endogamic trading prone to contagion and domino effects, the need of protection of small investors unfamiliar with the risks of opaque assets, the information gaps and the unclear legal status of crypto assets, and the lack of a liquidity backstop, and one starts to see why central banks around the globe have started to take the crypto revolution as a challenge to financial stability. While this has led some observers to argue that stablecoins should be banned altogether, central banks have so far adopted a more nuanced two-way response, requiring that they be properly regulatedand throwing their own central bank digital currency (CBDC) into the mix.

Unlike cryptocurrencies, a CBDC is a digital token that represents a legal claim on the central bankin other words, digital cash. As of this writing, out of the growing number of central banks exploring the feasibility of their own CBDC, 28 have already launched pilots (including one in China with roughly 260 million users), and at least three retail CBDC projects (in the Bahamas, Nigeria, and the Eastern Caribbean) are already in place.

Is this a new crypto-related fad, or the future of digital payments?

For starters, there is an issue that never ceases to be relevant to emerging economies: financial inclusion at reasonable costs. Private payment service providers (PSPs) such as PayPal, like banks and credit cards, tend to be concentrated and to charge high feeswhich in less developed economies tends to favor cash transactions and informalitywith several wholesale CBDCs focused on reducing cross-border transaction costsmost notably, of remittances. Moreover, in line with their inclusion mandate, retail CBDCs could allow for instant and final payments on a 24/7 basis at a negligible or zero charge for retail users, including those deemed unprofitable by private providers.

One could argue that many of those features are already covered by existing or forthcoming fast retail payment systems (FPRS). Based on a public data architecture and on the interoperability of different payment platforms, FPRS already allow for greater competition between banks and PSPs offering transactional accounts, while avoiding the pitfalls of monopolistic fees. Since their first launch in Korea in 2001, more than 60 jurisdictions have introduced FPRS, and many others are planning to do so. In Brazil, for example, after only 18 months of implementation, more than 70% of adults have used Pix, with 50 million first digital payment users. Indias successful Unified Payments Interface exhibits a comparable success, and Mexicos Codi and Argentinas Transferencias 3.0 are also making progress.

This notwithstanding, the continued research on CBDCs reflects additional concerns. In a context of ongoing digital innovation, many central banks fear a continuous decline in the demand for cash that risk losing the grip on monetary autonomy. On the upside (and more speculatively), a remunerated CBDC could potentially enlarge the monetary policy space, giving central banks new instruments to elude deflationary traps (a topical concern not so long ago).

The CBDC versus crypto debate is only starting and no doubt exceeds its more technical, monetary aspects. The crypto zeitgeist, like the hacker ethics of the 60s or the free software movements of the 80s, is often imbued with a cultural narrative that permeates lifestyles and ideologiesfrom tattooed billionaires to kamikaze politicians.

But ultimately it remains a financial issue that highlights the risks of mistaking technological ingenuity for monetary wisdom, jumping into the future without giving the future enough time to introduce itself.

Read more:
Cryptomania: The good, the bad, and the ugly - Brookings Institution