T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
508.1 | personal experience | ULTRA::ZURKO | Words like winter snowflakes | Fri Mar 17 1989 08:30 | 16 |
| I've been in and out of DEC twice. My first job was a DEC, 2nd at Prime, and
now back here. There was nothing like notes in my first two jobs.
When I first started this job I found I had the time and energy to keep up with
my group's notesfiles, several notesfiles directly related to work, and several
more general notesfiles, some val-dif types, and some not.
At some point in my job I 'kicked in'. I've noticed it as a personal pattern; I
hang out for a little while, then catch on.
Now I have time for this notesfile, though I have to come in early, stay later,
and eat lunch in front of it. I keep up with my group's notesfiles. I bop in
and out of the notesfiles directly related to work.
I am at the most productive I've ever been right now. I like the balance.
Mez
|
508.2 | A member of the "Amen" corner | HAMSTR::IRLBACHER | A middle class bag lady | Fri Mar 17 1989 08:31 | 11 |
| I think you have hit upon something quite true. People can become
addicted to these conferences. I think it is, in part, because
we really don't have a lot of 1 x 1 contact with people face to
face in our daily working lives. Thus, the conferences seem to
fill that need to communicate and although it is second-hand
communication (not face to face) it *seems* that way at times.
Amen to what you have commented upon. And again, Amen to giving
up the addiction.
Marilyn
|
508.3 | my .02 | LEZAH::BOBBITT | invictus maneo | Fri Mar 17 1989 09:49 | 27 |
| I find that participating in some notesfiles gives me a better feel
for who and what I am, and where I am in life as well as at DEC.
I read work-related conferences, valdif conferences, and some others
for self-improvement and fun when I can.
I think I would be equally or less productive if notes were removed
forever - I feel the harder you work, the harder you have to "play"
(even if that play is educational, enjoyable, and you feel it is
well worth the time spent). When I was a co-op at DEC I saw many
people "wasting time" with DND, MORIA, and other games - or simply
sitting at their desks reading - there were no notes then, but they
still didn't have great productivity. I believe the amount of work a
person will do has little to do with what distractions are around
them. Some people will be distracted by almost anything.
When I'm cranking on a manual I'm in depth, I've reached total "flow"
or "slack", whatever you'd care to call it. I am engrossed. I
feel the power of my abilities come to the fore as I create and
rework. This is what will increase my productivity. I *love* my
job.
If I were only able to read notes after hours, that would be
acceptible, too...but I hope I have enough control not to let notes
impact my job performance.
-Jody
|
508.5 | Bad Attitude! | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | It's beyond my control | Fri Mar 17 1989 11:22 | 25 |
| Re .4, what does sex have to do with noting? (and, anyway, speak
for yourself! :-) )
It's surprising that such a well-known noter as yourself should
have this attitude. :-)
To be honest, my job would be hell without notes. But, then I'm
not one of those people who has found a job that they love.
Actually, before I discovered notes about 3 yrs. ago, I spent just
as much time at work not working, only I spent it talking ("shooting
the sh*t") with co-workers, usually about stuff not 1/2 as interesting
as the stuff in notes. Now, instead of making boring chit-chat
with whoever happens to sit near me I quickly check a notesfile
when I need a break.
I think notes do serve a purpose, as Jody described. Anyway, who
wants to work in a sweatshop? (I ask myself, what would *I* - a
secretary - really get out of it if DEC was more productive? A
handful of men at the top might make a few more million? But, what
would I get? Frankly, should I bust my a** just so a few rich men
can get a little richer? I think not.)
Lorna
|
508.7 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | Words like winter snowflakes | Fri Mar 17 1989 12:00 | 4 |
| For as long as I have a skill people will pay dearly for, I will demand a
humane work environment. When I can't do it that way, I guess I'll have to
learn more about economics, philosophy, sociology, and polictical action.
Mez
|
508.8 | MHO | AWARD2::HARMON | | Fri Mar 17 1989 12:17 | 13 |
| Re: .6 I agree with you Eagle.
We all work for the same company and want, I hope, that company
to prosper. I try to do the best I can at my job, and ya, sometimes
I think "why....they aren't paying me enough to do this", but if
I didn't do the best I can then I'd earn less (i.e. no raises) and
because I am in a visable job, to DEC and customers, if I didn't
do the best and feel positive about Digital, it may come across
to the customer and they may think "gee, maybe DEC isn't the best
place to look for equipment.
P.
|
508.11 | | ACESMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Fri Mar 17 1989 13:27 | 15 |
| Work-related noting is certainly important. The notes files for
the products I work with provide an unofficial support tool. In
fact, life could be a lot easier for us if people in the field could
have regular access to the notes.
As far as employee-interest noting goes, I've found it to be very
useful in some ways. Casual noting helps reduce stress. (The Dave
Barry notes file had better be the last to go!) Even not-so-casual
noting has its benefits. I've learned a lot about the dynamics
of argument and communication. This comes in handy in "real time"
situations.
Very few things (if any) are inherently bad. Noting is not inherently
bad. Allowing noting to reduce productivity is bad, but the fault
doesn't lie with the notes file or the notes software.
|
508.13 | It helps put me to sleep. :-) | NEXUS::CONLON | A marcher for 'Take Back the Note' | Fri Mar 17 1989 13:43 | 25 |
| Marge (in .10) brought up a good point (about not being in
a standard 8_to_5 job.) Most of my heaviest noting is done
from home (because of my non-standard work schedule.)
Sometimes I use notes to unwind before I go to sleep in the
morning after work. People have commented to me more than
once (but not recently) that after having spent two or three
heavy hours in notes, I disappear for 6 hours and then return.
(That was me going across the hall to my bedroom and snoozing
for a quick 6 hours before returning to the discussion.) :-)
As for people who note mostly during work hours, I've heard
quite a few people say that it helps them to keep occupied
during times when they would be otherwise "waiting" at their
desks (for compiles, or customer support phone calls, etc.)
Noting seems a lot less disruptive during those times than
walking around chatting, or trying to half-start some other
project.
It keeps people at their terminals typing so that when the
"wait state" is over, the person is completely in position
to resume the former activity.
In other words, it's just making good use of "null" time,
like a batch job. :-)
|
508.15 | The cost is very little... | NEXUS::CONLON | A marcher for 'Take Back the Note' | Fri Mar 17 1989 14:37 | 10 |
| RE: .14
In my case, Digital paid for the phone install (because they
asked me to do it for my job, i.e., quick home response to
standby.) Since then, the only expense is a small monthly
charge, and I have been paying it (since I use it for both
work and non-work.)
The call to the modem pool is a local call, no expenses there.
|
508.16 | | HARDY::HENDRICKS | The only way out is through | Fri Mar 17 1989 16:04 | 35 |
| I've seen noting be both productive and destructive.
I too am measured on output ("just bring it in on time and under
budget, high quality too!"). If I want to note for an hour, I know
that I'm going to be here at my desk later in the day, week or quarter
getting the work done. Alternatively, if I'm on a roll with my
writing, I've been known to sit at my desk from 5 pm til midnight
taking advantage of that.
If the individual is committed to productivity, and sets reasonable
goals with her/his manager, and meets/exceeds those goals, the "how" should
be up to the employee.
If an individual is generally regarded as less than productive,
always has an excuse, is hard to find, and difficult to supervise,
I'd ask them to do their noting on their time until their performance
reached acceptable levels.
I don't know who it is the analysts think are so unproductive at
DEC. In my group, technical software course development, a number
of us joke about the regular hours kept by the "weekend and evening"
club. Perhaps that is related to how we are measured, though.
We write a project plan, get our schedules and budgets approved,
and then are measured on how well we meet our projected goals.
The other thing that notes has given me is an incredible network,
and a powerful sense of loyalty and belonging to something much
bigger than myself. I have often amazed people in my group by how
quickly I can answers and support on a variety of interesting subjects
when the non-noters don't even have a place to start.
I love DEC, both work AND notes, and I'm extremely committed to
maintaining the level of performance that allows me to do both!
Holly
|
508.17 | I think there is a fine line that you CAN cross... | BUSY::KLEINBERGER | Disic Vita Lux Hominum | Fri Mar 17 1989 17:08 | 25 |
| I am currently laying in bed, with a stomach that isn't sure it
ever wants to live again or not. Funny, although I could hardly
hold my head up yesterday, and nearly passed out at work, my boss
still called me, and needed something that only I could do. I logged
in and did it. Today, I rigged the terminal next to my pillow,
as he had some work that HAD to be done today, so between the bathroom
and falling asleep, the work was done. I didn't complain, and as
I told him, DEC doesn't pay me to get sick, they pay me to work.
So, when I do note on company time, I tend to look at it as a well
needed break. I do try to limit my noting time to lunch, before
and after work... but there are times at work that instead of
screaming and losing control, I return to my office log into notes,
and cool down...
Job related note conferences I look at as job related, and I read
them on official work time. When I do time management, I make sure
the time is there to read job related conferences.
I did think it was funny a week ago when my sec'tary asked me why
I was reading notes on company time... She was shocked to find
out that I did - how else would I keep in touch with
MAXCIM/BARCODE/SECURITY type stuff???
Gale
|
508.18 | just who IS productive? | NOETIC::KOLBE | The dilettante debutante | Fri Mar 17 1989 19:10 | 20 |
|
I spend more time in technical notesfiles than personal ones. I
would die without them, especially as I'm usually running field
test software of everything. They are the life blood of this
company anymore. I make technical contacts and am part of the
technical community that wouldn't even know I exist excpet for
notes. I'm in the boonies of Colorado, not the mecca of Nasuha.
As for when I note personally: As someone who spends more than a
few of my evenings and weekends working on my cluster and my
products I feel no guilt if I note during the day. As I said to a
secretary who complained once that I left too early, "where were
you last night at 2am when I was working on a sick system?" Many
of us work well past the 40 hour week and we don't get paid
overtime. I think about my job at work and at home and I think
about my personal life at work and at home.
MY personal opinion about how to up our productivity - stop having
so damned many project people who never actually produce anything
but paper. liesl
|
508.19 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Starfleet Security | Sat Mar 18 1989 03:59 | 68 |
| re:.14
I think that people are getting on your case about this not
*necessarily* because they disagree with what you're saying, but
they see some inherent hypocrisy in place. Consider this: you've
just written 3 notes *in this one topic* *in this one notesfile*
in less than 4 hours, and each one was during work hours. Does
this tell you something?
Are people rationalizing their noting? Yes, probably some are,
whether they think they are or not. Some people are not, though.
In my previous group, my job was essentially just being on hand
in case of emergencies. If I wasn't noting, I'd be reading a book
or playing solitaire. In my current group, I'm a lot busier, and
my noting, in general, has cut way down. I've dropped a number of
conferences from my notebook because I don't have the time for
them, and even in the ones I still read, I'm writing less, and
even reading less, simply because I don't have the time to get
involved in any long arguments (for example, when I come in at
night and see that there are 40 unread replies in the KKK/AA
discussion, I just skip over them because I don't feel I'm going
to get enough out of the time I'd need to invest in reading them.
Yes, I confess that there are times when soething comes up and I'll
put it off for a minute or two because I'm in the middle of a note.
And there are times when I need to work on a status report, and
end up noting instead. So, in cases like that, I just stay late
to work on the report. Of course, this happens only when the report
is not "time critical", i.e. has to be done by the time the day
shift comes in. To rationalize again, I'm probably impacting network
resources less by noting during the night and doing the report
stuff in the morning. Either way, DEC gets the work out of me that
they pay for. And, incidentally, I've interrupted my writing of
this very note three times in order to respond to job issues. I
don't think my priorities skewed (well, not much, anyways :-)).
As for noting from home: I have a DEC-supplied terminal at home
that I use for both business and personal sessions. Calling
Maynard from Littleton is *not* a local call. I don't charge DEC
one red cent even when the call is business-related, mostly because
when it is, I'm usually on for only a short period of time, and
not all that often.
As for noting as stress relief, this is not as much rationalization
as one might think. There are likely to be any number of people
who, if they didn't have notes to relieve stress, might end up
spending time (and working hours at that) with EAP, or taking an
occasional "mental health" day.
There is a value to noting above and beyond the obvious recreational
aspects. That it helps get a lot of people in tune with DEC as a
*large* corporation is not a rationalization. That it helps people
learn more about the systems they work with is not rationalization
-- even aside from work-related conferences, a lot of people have
undoubtedly learned a *lot* about networking because of Notes that
they wouldn't otherwise know. I'm sure that there are quite a few
folks who've ended up in networking-related career paths simply
because they became interested in the concept simply by noting.
Others have undoubtedly increased their own positions in the company,
as well as their value to the company simply through the contacts
that they've made via Notes.
Notes is no different than any other recreational activity that
is supported by the corporation. I'd be willing to lay odds that
less productivity is lost due to noting than to employees making
doctor's appointments during work hours.
--- jerry
|
508.20 | O do I have an opinion about this!! | BALMER::MUDGETT | did you say FREE food? | Sat Mar 18 1989 09:03 | 42 |
| Ohhhhh you got me started so this might be a long note.
DEC could very easily be the least productive computer company but
it is also the most dynamic in the buisness. DEC since it started
has done things its own way. There is nothing else in the buisness
like notes even the unix networks are really only billboards that
have no connection to individual companys.
This reaction to notes that it cuts down productivty is the reaction
of the beancounters. As long as KO is around we are going to be
safe from these guys. But when KO has sent out his last memo look
out! You know those people who wander around the halls carrying
a clipboard with a confused look on their face...well we'll be
working for (or should it be with) them. I worked for XEROX in an
earlier life and the beancounters ran the place and they watched
everything we did and ruined the company. I think DEC does things
just about right. We are very choosy about hiring good people and
make them accountable for there work. The beancounters want complete
control over everything and they think they can tell you how to
do things better.
I don't think this is a productivty vs noting question I think its
a question of weather DEC can continue to be as open, agressive
and dynamic as it ha been in the past in the future. What makes
the company this way? Notes are one of them. To be productive in
the buisness nowadays we need to have all the information possiable
and the widest possiable network.
One last example of a wrong direction was Kennedy Tape DrivesC
Company. They got bought out by a outfit who cut their manufacturing
employees by 1/3. They also killed all R+D. They saved huge amounts
of money and have distroyed the future of the company
r .18 The secratary who grills me in the morning about start time
always gets my lecture about the dead system that I was at last night
until whenever and that is why I'm in late this morning, that usually
solves the question.
Sorry about rambling
Fred Mudgett
|
508.21 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | I'm the NRA | Mon Mar 20 1989 06:46 | 4 |
| re .17 Gale, I hope your secretary has "Reading 'DEC_SECRETARY'"
on *her* time management schedule.
Dana ;-)
|
508.22 | Good Thing? | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | just a revolutionary with a pseudonym | Mon Mar 20 1989 08:30 | 65 |
508.23 | | ULTRA::ZURKO | Words like winter snowflakes | Mon Mar 20 1989 10:49 | 10 |
| I'm way behind on this note...
But I was thinking this weekend: has anyone had to work with someone they
formed a distinctly negative impression of via notes? That's my biggest concern
when the topics get tough. You interviewed with their group, they interviewed
with your group, you had to work together in a meeting in a meeting, you were
already in the same group, etc.
I'll be glad to post anonymously, or read.
Mez
|
508.25 | Ahem...let's try that again... | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | just a revolutionary with a pseudonym | Mon Mar 20 1989 13:44 | 68 |
|
I'm suprised that we're so ready to label notes as merely a
"recreational activity"...
Granted, it may be seen that way by the "straight and narrow"
and the "beancounters" - who's only conceptual context is that of
the bottom line...
However, I do concurr with the opinion that once "Ken" make his
choice to retire, the "acedemic" flavor of the style with which this
company is run will likely go with him.
That's too bad. Because there's more to a company than just
it's "capitol gains performance" or whatever. I know, I know, the
concept is hard for some to hold - might even sound like "communism"!
But, the fact remains that a work environment contributes directly
to the _quality_of_life_ for it's employees.
Over a hundred years ago, it was the "same issue"...I quote
point 7 from an 1852 notice to employees from a Burnley cotton mill
office:
"The owners recognise the generosity of the new Labour Laws,
but will expect a great rise in output of work to compensate for
these near utopian conditions"
Obviously, the "owners" really didnt give a flyin' you_know_
what about the environment within which the workers had to labor,
and it's quite obvious that this statement reflects a certain peeve
they held toward the "generous new Labor Laws"...
Has not our conscious attitude toward this risen above that of
100 years ago? Or are we still trotting along with our blinders on,
blind to perhaps legitimate needs of those in the modern work
environment?
I mean, this *is* 1989. - Yeah, that's a *nine* there, in the
"hundreds" place. There's more to life than what happens on Wall Street.
I'm *sure* there are those whom you'd have a very hard time explaining
that too. It's something that I think "Ken" well understands...
I'd say that the *best* companies are the one's that offer the
best work/life environment possible for it's employees. A happy employee
is a productive employee - certainly far more so than one who may be
distraught and miserable. If "notes" happens to effect one's demeanor
at times, in a positive way, then our _having_ notes is actually
contributing to the productivity of the *whole* - something the
"individual measure" mind-set cannot account for. Simply put.
If I were to help someone else toward their serenity, through my
consideration of an issue that was troubling them enough to interfere
with their work, then I *have* contributed to the productivity of this
company. While it may not be "reportable" on my time card (i.e. cant be
measured) it's *still* a contribution. It's just indirect. I used "mail"
or "notes" - both company owned facilities to do this? So what! Again,
it only bothers those who are so_concerned with the idea of "measure"...
Even if one's demenour is effected in a negative way by a note
entry, it still can be considered productive for that to happen. 9
times out of 10, the note is merely "setting off" something much
deeper within someone, something that they will eventually have to face
anyway. It is much more productive for that kind of thing to happen
"here" than it would be for that to happen at a meeting, or on a service
call, or on the factory floor, or in front of customers. IMHO.
Joe Jas
|
508.26 | I READ NOTES WHEN... | FSHQA1::DROGER | | Mon Mar 20 1989 16:42 | 46 |
|
I have found that I read the notesfile when I'm lacking something
in my job....excitement, challenge etc. Killing time = Notesfile.
I know there are a lot of DEC related notes available...so the prior
phrase doesn't necessarily apply to all notesfiles.
When I'm real busy in my job, excited about my job, challenged in
my job...I don't have the time or interest to peruse the notesfiles.
Yes, we do need productive people in this company. What company
would NOT want productive people? But why are people unproductive?
Is it because they are unhappy in their job? Are they unchallenged?
Are they wasting their true skills/talents in their job?
I would like to see the Corporation do an employee survey of some sort
asking employees questions like:
o Are you currently satisfied in your job?
o Do you feel your talents/skills are being used to the fullest?
o If given the opportunity, would you participate in a Corporate
sponsored program to analyze your talents/skills/desires/goals?
o Would you be interested in participating in a Corp. sponsored
program which would train you in the area where your skills could
be used in preparation of a different job?
o etc. etc. etc.
I know that there are Employee Development seminars such as
Self Assessment etc. which involves using the Myers-Briggs
questionnaire. It is very useful in helping one analyze their skills
etc. and attempts to help the individual find the direction they
must go. But what about AFTER you've taken this assessment of
yourself? What is your next step? Are there Corp. sponsored courses
that would train you in preparation for another job within DEC?
There are definitely a lot of people in this Company who are wasting
away in their current jobs. But I feel that this would be less
prevalent if people were placed in a job that would enhance their
talents and not suffocate them.
Any ideas?
Donna
Donna
|
508.27 | | ANT::SLABOUNTY | Consume ka-ka and expire. | Mon Mar 20 1989 18:59 | 17 |
|
I limit my 'heavy noting' to lunch or before/after hours,
but I usually stay logged in to NOTES for most of the day
to 'monitor' conferences (especially Heavy_Metal, which I
co-moderate).
If I see a note that I'd like to reply to, but know that my
reply will be long-winded, I'll either EXTract it and then
reply to it in an EDIT file or add a marker to it to find
it easier later.
And when I'm noting on company time, it's when I'm doing
REAL work ... wiring or testing ... and I read the notes
in between parts cooling down/heating up or just reach over
and hit NEXT UNSEEN between soldering resistors.
Shawn L.
|
508.28 | i agree... | APEHUB::STHILAIRE | you heard me | Tue Mar 21 1989 13:37 | 9 |
| Re .24, Joe, I completely agree with you. That's what I *meant*
to say, only I was too angry when I wrote my reply to take the time
to be as articulate!
I also agree with .25. That would be a good idea. Too bad it doesn't
happen.
Lorna
|
508.29 | Work Smarter, Not Harder | SAGE::OWENS | Dave Owens | Mon Mar 27 1989 14:04 | 16 |
| I worry whether DEC can work smarter, not harder. For example,
one basic tenant of the DEC Culture is that we allow products to
compete. Traditionally, this has reinforced independence. If my
product within DEC is better than yours, the market place will show
it.
Perhaps this attitude is getting obsolete. Maybe the industry
has gotten mature enough that we ought to try to shape the marketplace
with single products. Notice that both VAX/VMS and Apple MacIntosh
were single shaping products.
Application software lends itself to consolidated virtual-like
environments just like VMS. This, to me, is working smarter, not
harder.
Dave - who hasn't logged into this file yet
|
508.31 | | HANDY::MALLETT | Barking Spider Industries | Tue Mar 28 1989 10:54 | 17 |
| re: .30
Why should it be an either/or question, Eagles? Is it possible
that sometimes it can be a form of working smarter, other times
a form of relaxation, other times a way of propagating DEC
"culture" (whatever that may be), and still others a kind of
addiction?
I like a good deal of what Jerry said (.19) for he touched
on a lot of the different aspects of noting. I've found
that beyond the essential alive/dead question, little in
this life reduces to a binary. It also strikes me that, while
we're speaking in terms of "notes", we're really talking about
"noters" - the carpenter, not the tool, and all that.
Steve
|
508.33 | Yup | BOLT::MINOW | I'm the ERA | Tue Mar 28 1989 14:10 | 9 |
| re: .32:
Proposition: "Participation in =womannotes= is Good for Digital!"
Agreed.
Also, if I spent twice as much time at "real work" as I do now, I'd
get half as much done.
Martin_with_a_compilation_chugging_away_on_the_other_computer_on_my_desk
|
508.34 | | RUBY::BOYAJIAN | Starfleet Security | Wed Mar 29 1989 06:43 | 9 |
| re: the now missing .30 (and possibly .32)
Eagle (I'm assuming, due to Steve's reply, that you wrote .30),
if you were replying to my .19 in your .30, you'll have to try
again. I've been on vacation since Thursday morning, and didn't
read your note before you deleted it. The hazards of deleting one's
own notes after an arbitrary period of time.
--- jerry
|
508.36 | This reply will self-destruct automatically! | SERPNT::SONTAKKE | Vikas Sontakke | Thu Mar 30 1989 16:25 | 18 |
| < DISCLAIMER >
< This reply has been re-entered. Moderator received a complaint
that my reply was a personal attack. I have rephrased my reply with
the help of the concerned moderator. This should get the point across
more easily since I will not limit myself to use meager space
available in a reply title. >
>< Note 508.35 by AERIE::THOMPSON "tryin' real hard to adjust..." >
> -< Notes_USE_Can_Easily_Become_ABUSE... >-
If someone wanted to figure it out who abuses notes, and one did not
want to be called on the carpet for doing so, one could always delete
one's notes after a short period of time.
By the divine authority vested in me,
- Vikas
|
508.37 | Justa another response ... | 3988::EARLY | Bob Early CSS/NSG | Mon Apr 03 1989 14:20 | 66 |
| re: .0
This argument and logic has been around several times before. At one
point (mayhaps someone can define the date better) within the past rwo
years, DEC as a Corporation, in response to such an opinion, made a
conscience decision to permit the non-Business notes to remain on the
systems.
Part of the reason is that notes are not just part of the DEC Culture,
but they, by their nature, are helping the DEC Business and Social
fabric to be better served.
For example: By what method is superior do people in the US get
an appreciation for how the avereage Englishman, Scotsman, or Irishman
view the situation in Northern Ireland?
Is there a better method for Aussies to get the opinions of how
Americans (USA type) view the hostage situation in Iran ?
Personally, both for social and business, notes a have enabled me
to understand otehr DECcies better across many issues,and to sensitize
my own feelings to the social conditions across many lifestyels
both parrallel and divergent from my own; providing a level of
anonymity on sensitive and often delicate issues.
Part of this has contributed to my personal success at Digital,
and has helped me to garner resources at difficult times.
Electronic friendships are as concrete and strong as those of a
physical proximity, in the sense of a "Network of Friends".
There are people (we all know them) who will cheer the day that
non-business notes go away. True,as others have noted, there are those
who more/less live in the Cafeteria. They come to work at 8:30, get
breakfdast in the cafeteria, and return to their desk to eat and read
the News.
Some people with Standalone CPUs play illegal games, or write various
messages, jokes, humour, for forwarding around the world. People colect
for charities, sell cookies, explpoit peeers for donations to outside
interests and a host of other greivenaces.
True, prior to coming to DEC, there was nothing similiar to Notes. And
likewise True, all those comapnies went Chapter 11 or were taken over
into a conglomerate. Some mentions of PRIME was made. AS was WANG.
Check out the recent news on both, in regards to layoffs, cutbacks, and
loss of revenues.
Out of the non-DEC notes ahve come many support files for Alchoholics,
Woman, Rape Victims, DEC-help Wanted ads, Self Help, Parental Guidance,
Bible Topics,Arms Race, Telephony, etc.
DEC is diverse,and many people would like a better understanding on how
the "other half" lives.
Notes provides that interface. It becomes a management task to contol
how employees use their time to the companys' benefit,and a matter
of personal ethics for each person to control their discretionary
time; whether its NOtes, the Cafeteria, Coming in Late, GOIng home
early, working out at the fitness center, taking trivial seminars
for non-Business goals, using the corporate aircraft for personal
use, etc ...
Bob Early
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