Yeah why do that instead lets hire 30,000 new employees with pensions and lifetime healthcareIf the IRS were allowed to update their outdated computer systems, this would not be near the issue that it now is.
JC
Yeah why do that instead lets hire 30,000 new employees with pensions and lifetime healthcareIf the IRS were allowed to update their outdated computer systems, this would not be near the issue that it now is.
JC
What updating do they need? Are they running Widows 95 or something?If the IRS were allowed to update their outdated computer systems, this would not be near the issue that it now is.
JC
What updating do they need? Are they running Widows 95 or something?
If they're "allowed" to hire 75,000 new agents, each needing a computer, workspace, salary and benefits I'm just not buying it....
Yeah why do that instead lets hire 30,000 new employees with pensions and lifetime healthcare
The IRS has two primary operating systems, the "Individual Master File System" and the "Business Master File System". Both systems were written in an assembly language, and are approximately 60 years old. Win95 might be considered a significant upgrade.I think they are running Windows 98. No worker can do a proper job without proper tools. I don't know about you but I get tangible benefits by paying taxes.
JC
I had read something along those lines. But I can't throw stones, for 30 years I used a DOS version of Quicken in my business. Data entry was very easy, and the reports I turned into my CPA came in a summary and itemized versions. The downside was that Windows XP was the last OS to support my program, so I had two laptops reserved only for quicken. And backed everything up on pdf files.The IRS has two primary operating systems, the "Individual Master File System" and the "Business Master File System". Both systems were written in an assembly language, and are approximately 60 years old. Win95 might be considered a significant upgrade.