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Virtualization has helped immensely in many ways to reduce resources used and to eliminate costs.

People used to buy books, games, music, movies, in addition to clocks, cameras and others you mention in a physical form but now are moving to virtual products. Many products are virtual now from play/entertainment to work/administrative (file cabinets, storage, etc). Just looking at my own purchases, most are virtual when they used to fill book shelves, cabinets and trash bins eventually.

Ultimately virtual goods will help solve, and is helping solve resources used, while allowing growth. Lots of pushing resources previously was about getting to that growth metric, growth can now happen, and even in greater numbers exponentially in virtual worlds like apps, games, movies, offices, government, businesses and more.

Virtual goods have also helped 'clean up' areas like many think the crime reduction after the 90s was the result of some policy, but ultimately it was the internet that cleaned it up and reduced crime. People are indoors, more aware, more access to information that they need/want. Even Times Square cleanup was attributed to oversight, when in actuality the porn went online which led to less crime and less out in the open products.

Virtual goods and products moving this way is helping us not just to dematerialize, but move to virtual resources that are bits on a disk not physical content, bookshelves and cabinets.



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