T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
135.1 | Programmers | CONS::ROSE | | Thu Jun 12 1986 13:47 | 25 |
|
I don't get the secretary joke. Please explain!
You forgot a group:
PROGRAMMERS: On the shelf: Language manuals, VMS manuals
Dictionary (we can't spel)
"Common Lisp" by Guy Steele (the
Bible)
Stacks of unneeded but "can't
be thrown away" outputs.
On the wall: Rock posters (Grateful Dead
preferably)
Doonesbury/Bloom County strips
On the desk: Coffee stains
more outputs
three or four terminals
plants
In the desk: Nothing but listings and outputs
|
135.2 | Official mascot of secretaries everywhere | NATASH::MEDEIROS | In Search of Mediocrity | Thu Jun 12 1986 14:27 | 8 |
| Re .1:
A quick stroll around the department here indicates
"Garfield" in either poster or clipped-from-the-Sunday-paper
form in roughly a third of the secretarial stations (or cubicles
or whatever you call them). The messages are either "I hate my
job" ("I'm allergic to Mondays" is typical) or "I'm on a diet
and I hate that, too" ("I'm not overweight - I'm undertall!").
|
135.3 | It keeps people out of my hair!! ;-) | EUREKA::KRISTY | Beware! Attack person on duty! | Thu Jun 12 1986 15:39 | 9 |
| Well, I guess I fit in the Garfield-Secretary majority (minority?).
I have a Garfield poster in my office that explains, "Do it to me
now, Monday!!!"
But I also have a little magnet outside my office next to my nameplate
that states, "Beware! Attack Secretary!"
*** Kristy ***
|
135.4 | | ECCGY1::JAERVINEN | formerly MUNICH::ORA | Fri Jun 13 1986 10:11 | 8 |
|
"If a cluttered desk is a sign of a cluttered mind, then what
does an empty desk mean?"
Have you ever compared a programmer's/SW Engineer's etc. desk to
a senior mgr's desk...
|
135.5 | If I cleaned up, I'd never find anything ... | CYCLPS::BAHN | Help stamp out Mental Health ... | Sat Jun 14 1986 18:01 | 1 |
| A neat desk is a sign of a sick mind ...
|
135.6 | | EUREKA::KRISTY | Happiness, loving & being loved! | Sat Jun 14 1986 20:07 | 5 |
| Another good one is "It's my mess and I love it!" I've used that
one my CC Mgr many times... besides compared to his office, mine
is SPOTLESS!!!
*** Kristy ***
|
135.7 | Whose business is your desk? | PABLO::SLOANE | | Mon Jun 16 1986 14:40 | 8 |
| Unless customers regularly look at your desk, how neat you keep
it (or don't keep it) should be YOUR business only.
Managers should have more important things to do than worry about
your desk. [Mine does - I make sure she does - but that's another
story.]
-Bruce
|
135.8 | what's it mean? | RAJA::MERRILL | Glyph it up! | Mon Jun 16 1986 14:47 | 9 |
| A clean desk means I've got at least ONE thing under control!
An office environment should avoid the two extremes of
stirile << health hazzard, but most of all avoid the
<< avalanche danger!
RMM
|
135.9 | Will you messy ones leave us nneat ones alone? | EVER::MCVAY | Pete McVay | Tue Jun 17 1986 09:18 | 12 |
| I am a neatnik. I admit it. However, I do not visit this particular
hangup on others--that is, I don't insist that everyone else be
neat too.
But I am CONTINUALLY catching all kinds of crap from the sloppy
types out there for being neat! They assume that I'm going to come
in and dump on them or something. I recently had a discussion with
another neatnik (do you read this file, Regina?) and we discovered
that our "Significant Others" do the same thing: they are slobs
but get after us for being neat!
So who is really the one with the hangup here?
|
135.10 | It's not clutter, its random access storage! | HITECH::BLOTCKY | | Sat Jun 21 1986 20:12 | 0 |
135.11 | Words to live by | LSTARK::THOMPSON | Noter of the LoST ARK | Thu Jun 26 1986 11:15 | 4 |
| "One of the advantages of being disorderly is that one is constantly
making exciting discoveries."
- A. A. Milne
|
135.12 | | RANI::LEICHTERJ | Jerry Leichter | Thu Jun 26 1986 23:27 | 20 |
| Two coworkers at a group I used to work for, after a bit of discussion of their
respective office organizing principles, posted signs outside of their offices.
One said:
Any collection of papers is immediately rendered organized
when placed in folders.
The other said:
Any collection of papers is immediately rendered organized
when placed in piles.
In response, I threatened to post the following:
Any collection of papers is immediately rendered organized
when placed in this office.
(I never did it because my office was so far away that no one would have gotten
the joke.)
-- Jerry
|
135.13 | about the big managers offices affect on the mode of company | STAR::ABBASI | iam your friendly psychic hotline | Sat Dec 26 1992 00:33 | 22 |
| >UPPER MANAGEMENT: At this level, the only typical signs of
> individuality are a picture of the family
> (framed) and some sort of sporting motif
> in one of three accepted styles: golf,
> tennis, or sailing. Pick one. Awards or
> trophies in one of these are a plus.
there was a program once on TV about offices of big managers a while
ago, and how the office of the big manager supposed to reflect the
atmosphere of the company itself, i dont think myself there is a
relationships between the 2, it depends on the mode of the boss really.
i never seen in the real life an office of a big managers in DEC,
like a VP or a senior VP, i always wondered how they looked like inside.
i bet they are big and has lots of chairs in them and nice window
seats, all the important people in DEC get the window seats, the less
important people you see them crowded in the middle of the isle
near the coffee station usually or near the elevators , why cant
they design the cubes so that every cube looks at a window? any way
iam digressing here.
\bye
\nasser
|
135.14 | | STIMPY::QUODLING | | Sat Dec 26 1992 21:45 | 9 |
|
Nasser, digressing is an understatement. A year or so ago, I sat a few
cubes down from Bill Strecker. Yup, common or garden cube. nothing
fancy. It was near a window, but there wasn't much of a view. Many of
DEC's senior management have fairly innocuous offices. Me, I hate
windowed offices, you always end up with sun glare coming in the
window.
q
|
135.15 | Then again in other cultures window office=retired in place | 28250::STENGEL | | Mon Jan 04 1993 13:53 | 15 |
| I'm reminded of a recent trip (June 92) I took to Japan to present at a Digital
CIM-seminar. My office then was in HLO and the window looked out over the
construction area. I was planning to mention the "window office" in my
presentation but had to modify the content. As explained to me by the folks
who did the interpretion, in Japan getting a job with a window office is the
same as saying the manager got his walking papers. (Out the door, retired in
place, in charge of grooming the plants.....of the flower variety not manufacturing!
In any case, one of the managers that overheard me preparing my slide approached
me with a a grievious look on his face and said...."I did not know that you
and Kerry-san (my supervisor, who has the office next to mine...) had been given
a window office. Was there anything he could do to help us out ....!!!
So sorry that this has happened to you, and on and on. Luckily, my puzzled
look and the quick thinking of the translator (mentioned above) helped me to
clairify that windows mean different things to different DIGITS :^)
|
135.16 | | SONATA::FEENEY | non golfers live half a life | Fri Jan 08 1993 12:09 | 4 |
| In Switzerland the government requires that all employees have a view
to the outside from their office in permitting any construction. Some
buildings have a center hole to accommodate the requirement. The view
is limited in many cases but you can see out.
|