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What does it mean "tomorrow—today" ?
”To help build the converged infrastructure of tomorrow—today”
The meaning of "tomorrow—today" is unclear for me.
Does it mean "now and future" ?
Dec 6, 2012 1:17 AM
Answers · 2
The " -- " is a new way of creating a comma.
You know a comma creates a space or pause, right?
Read it out loud:
"To help build the converged infrastructure of tomorrow, today."
Does that make sense?
I would guestimate that the visual impact of the " -- " in print is one of the reasons it's becoming more common, and also -- texting/emailing is changing how people use punctuation.
December 6, 2012
To help build today the most modern converged infrastructure today - one that we would expect to be built only in the future - the one that we would not actually expect to be built today, but rather tomorrow.
December 6, 2012
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Language Skills
English, Japanese
Learning Language
English
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