T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1473.1 | CHECK OUT MKO | SOLVIT::FISK | | Thu May 16 1991 15:15 | 6 |
| Such a service is already running in MK and ZK that I know of.
Possibly other places as well.
Regards,
Owen
|
1473.2 | Corporate-wide DECplan server? | FUNYET::ANDERSON | VMS: First and Last and Always | Thu May 16 1991 15:34 | 7 |
| DECplan, currently in field test but due to be released soon, is wonderful for
scheduling resources, including rooms. The features of each room (has slide
projector, twelve chairs, etc.) can also be stored.
Maybe there could be a coporate-wide DECplan server to handle such a system.
Paul
|
1473.4 | What about this? | SCAACT::AINSLEY | Less than 150 kts. is TOO slow | Thu May 16 1991 23:19 | 10 |
| re: .0
Why do we want a company-wide conference room scheduler? It doesn't
seem to make any sense to allow me to schedule a conference room in
Reading, England from Dallas, Texas.
That said, there is some kind of layered product for ALL-IN-1 that does
just what you want. I don't remember whether it is an Asset or not.
Bob
|
1473.5 | Digital has it now | SHIRE::GOLDBLATT | | Fri May 17 1991 03:56 | 5 |
| At the European HQ, our ALL-IN-1 mail system includes conference room
scheduling for all the buildings (used to be four, now two). We've had
this for the past few years, and it has been of great use.
David
|
1473.6 | who owns the rooms? | ISOISA::HAKKARAINEN | Verb not thy nouns. | Fri May 17 1991 09:58 | 11 |
| The technology (VTX, DECPlan, ALL-IN-1, CONF, whatever) is probably the easiest
part of the task. We could quite easily build something to manage the chore. The
real difficulty is very few people regard conference rooms as Corporate
resources. In several sites, you have to supply your DTN or badge number to the
system to prove that you're authorized to reserve a room. In order to schedule
a meeting convenient to people from MRO, ZKO, and MLO, for example, you must
have a friend in the Littleton area.
Solve the ownership problem and the development of a scheduling tool will be a
walk in the park.
|
1473.7 | | MPO::WHITTALL | Charlie Whittall @ MAXCIM Prog. Off. | Fri May 17 1991 10:02 | 24 |
| I think people are missing the point of the original request.
It seems to me that if I've got to schedule a room for a
meeting in the Greater Maynard area, then I should have a
way of looking at ALL conference rooms irregardless of the
location. I know that when we try to book for our quarterly
SIG meetings, the chairpeople go thru a lot of grief to find
locations, and rooms both available and large enough to meet
the needs...
What I've read so far is, yes we can do it, but only for our
site.. Sorry, that doesn't always fit the bill.. If person
X is gathering people from a vast group, and instead of 1 or
2 having to travel a lot of miles, we now make 6,7, or whatever
travel many miles to come to the hosting center, because...
'This is the only place that I have access to...'
To answer the original question.. Joanne, try submitting this
idea to DELTA.. Send a memo to CAPNET::DELTA_IDEAS asking for
a submittal form.. I've done this before with very good success
from the Delta people..
Thanks
Charlie
|
1473.8 | Great Time Saving Potential | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Fri May 17 1991 14:06 | 25 |
| Absolutely. People DO have need to access conference room availability
in various locations-- not just their own. I had a major task trying
to book a room in one location off 495 just this past week. It took
more phone calls than it was worth-- and unless you have a good network
of people that you know in various facilities, then it is going to
involve a long series of calls.
The point that conference rooms are a Corporate Resource is right on.
We should all be able to access the information and if one or two rooms
in a building are kept off the system to keep them "private" - that's
something that could be lived with, too.
I believe Joanne has tried DELTA and as of yet, has not had any luck.
A server that could reach all locations is certainly desirable. User
friendly, non-complex... no badge number or purpose of meeting field...
a simple, easy-to-use system would be best.
Best of luck to you, Joanne. This is a wonderful idea, and I believe
that VTX is a good place to put this.
Just imagine the time and frustration the VTX CONF feature could save
for people!
Rgds,
marcia
|
1473.9 | With DECmcc, you could even look up rooms on iconic maps | TOOK::DMCLURE | Work to build the net | Fri May 17 1991 14:32 | 15 |
| So, you want to manage the reservation of all DEC conference
rooms from anywhere on the network eh? Someone could probably
solve this problem with a DECmcc (DEC management control system)
conference room Access Module (AM).
The motto here in DECmcc-land (LKG2) is "I never met an entity
I couldn't manage" (this appears on a coffee mug with the picture
of some guy staring a giant monster in the face). DECmcc is primarily
designed to manage networks and network devices, but it has also
been used to manage everything from sysuaf.dat files, to fire alarms,
and rumor has it that it has even been used to manage a toaster.
Why not conference rooms too?
-davo
(DECmcc DECnet AMs Developer)
|
1473.10 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri May 17 1991 14:48 | 16 |
| Although someone said "DEC owns the conference rooms", that's not
completely true. Each site plans and budgets space including a
certain number of conference rooms.
Some controls need to be put on who uses the conference rooms at a
particular site.
For example, it is completely reasonable for a facility to require
that at least one meeting attendee be from the site hosting the meeting.
Otherwise, conference rooms at sites which are easily reached, have
nice conference rooms, and a good cafeteria may get used up by outsiders,
leaving the local site residents with no place to go for meetings that
need to be scheduled on short notice.
/john
|
1473.11 | Not necessarily... | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Fri May 17 1991 15:24 | 18 |
| >For example, it is completely reasonable for a facility to require
>that at least one meeting attendee be from the site hosting the
>meeting.
Sorry John, I don't agree. When I am scheduling a meeting for someone
(high level, if that makes a differece-- and it shouldn't make a
difference, really), and some attendees are from Mass., some are from
N.H., I prefer to compromise by scheduling it at a site which is
equidistant for all parties involved.
The only CRs which should have strict control are those which are
"customer" conference rooms. Obviously, customer meetings take
priority over internal meetings at any time.
I don't believe that a group which is primarily located at XYZ is going
to travel to QQQ for a meeting because the cafeteria is better.
Just my opinion...
|
1473.12 | | MIPSBX::thomas | The Code Warrior | Fri May 17 1991 18:34 | 3 |
| It's hard enough to be able to get a conference room in LKG even when you
work there. If people in MKO, ZKO, MLO, MRO, etc. could reserve conference
rooms, local folks would hardly ever be able to hold onsite meetings.
|
1473.13 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri May 17 1991 18:49 | 16 |
| LKG is the specific example I was referring to.
It is conveniently located between MKO, ZKO, MLO, and MRO.
It is a nice facility.
It has one of the best cafeterias in the U.S.
And it has had serious problems in the past with all conference rooms
being full because of its popularity as a meeting site.
It is unreasonable for people in LKG to be unable to use a conference
room that THEIR facility pays for because it's filled up with people
who have no connection with LKG.
/john
|
1473.14 | only half joking | CSC32::K_BOUCHARD | Ken Bouchard CXO3-2 | Fri May 17 1991 18:56 | 5 |
| Now there's a use for all those plants DEC is closing: convert 'em to
"conference facilities". Bet we'd never run out of conference rooms
*then*!
Ken
|
1473.15 | death by bell-and-whistle | LABRYS::CONNELLY | Can I get there by candlelight? | Fri May 17 1991 23:22 | 6 |
|
Hmmmn...maybe we need an AI application that knows where all conference rooms
are, takes a list of meeting attendees and computes the optimal room in terms
of size, total mileage money spent, etc., vs. all other possible meetings.;-)
paul
|
1473.16 | A Solution | SAHQ::LUBER | I'm schizophrenic and I am too | Mon May 20 1991 10:18 | 2 |
| Not to worry. Within a few months, the number of conference rooms per
DEC employee ratio will double.
|
1473.17 | best of luck!!!!! | ISLNDS::GASKELL | | Mon May 20 1991 10:59 | 18 |
| Notes 6 and 10 have good points.
It will take an act of God to make the individual facilities realize
that they are working for DEC and not themselves. DEC owns the
space like they own everything else. Sites don't quibble about
sharing Payroll with other parts of DEC, so why do they go ape when
sharing a little conference room space?
A few times I have had to reschedule meetings because a room was
not to be had anywhere, holding up the process of the work in the
meantime. THATS RIDICULOUS!
Set aside one or two rooms for outside use only and when not in
use make them available to the host site. Equality would be if
it were mandatory for each site.
Best of luck!!!!!!
|
1473.18 | Get Rid of 'em | WHOS01::BOWERS | Dave Bowers @WHO | Mon May 20 1991 12:17 | 5 |
| I suggest eliminating conference rooms completely. Reducing the
opportunities for meetings would greatly speed the decision-making
process within Digital ;^)
-dave
|
1473.19 | Charge for meetings! | ESCUDO::PIOSAG_SEC | | Mon May 20 1991 13:13 | 10 |
| No, No, No! Don't eliminate 'em! Charge for 'em!
Anyone offsite who wants/needs to schedule a meeting at _my_ location
should pay rent (cash, to keep the financial overhead low) to _me_! Just
consider it another way to simplify things! :-)
(at the rate we have meetings, this could be more profitable than a
buyout) :-) :-) :-)
Dick
|
1473.20 | on-line scheduler | GENRAL::CRANE | Barbara Crane --- dtn 522-2299 | Mon May 20 1991 15:45 | 14 |
| We also have an on-line system here in Colorado Springs--
OSCR--On-line Scheduler for Conference rooms.
The difficult part in the original suggestion is drawing
the right size "circle" to define local conference rooms. Even
inside a large facility, we have the same problem. What isn't on
system is a way to tell the scheduler to "start here, and then move
outward in ever-increasing circles, up to a certain point".
We have occasionally had outside groups abuse the scheduling
a bit--they're prone to schedule, then no-show because they locate
a more convenient place, and forget to cancel the original room.
|
1473.21 | not really all that useful a scheme | CADSYS::HECTOR::RICHARDSON | | Tue May 21 1991 11:08 | 17 |
| Our conference room scheduling program here in HLO could use some work
(I don't know who wrote it or maintains it, if anyone is maintaining
it). If you need to schedule a one-shot meeting here, good luck! Most
of the conference rooms are unoccupied most of the time, but almost all
of them are fully booked in the scheduling system every day. And the
system doesn't tell you who booked the room you would prefer, so that
you can ask if it will actually be in use. So, you end up with "the
only available room", at the far end of the other building, even though
the nearby rooms of the same size are unoccupied as you hike past all
of them on your way to "your" room. Part of the problem seems to be
that some groups routinely book all of the rooms near their offices for
8-6 every day, so that those rooms will always be available to them.
The scheduling system doesn't tell you that, though, but you sometimes
find out if you track down some group secretary to see if (s)he knows if
a room is actually free after all.
/Charlotte
|
1473.22 | Use/Misuse/Abuse | MYGUY::LANDINGHAM | Mrs. Kip | Tue May 21 1991 16:43 | 3 |
| It's unfortunate but there will always be someone who knows how to
abuse a system. Perhaps a monthly printout could be monitored by a
responsible individual-- perhaps in Facilities?
|
1473.23 | APO has a VTX-based c.r. scheduler | RUTLND::MCMAHON | Code so clean you can eat off it! | Tue May 21 1991 16:56 | 9 |
| Here in APO we have a pretty good VTX-based conference room scheduler.
You tell it what date, the timeframe and the number of attendees and it
will give you a list of unscheduled rooms that will hold at least the
number of attendees. You can also query who has booked what rooms so
you can contact them if you need to. We've been using it for years with
very few complaints. The only limitation is that you must be known to
the system to book a room. This was a feature that the secretaries
wanted when we went looking for a scheduling system. I'm sure this
could be changed to capture the nodename::username of the 'booker'.
|
1473.24 | Thoughts on CR Tools, Abuse, and More... | CREVAS::ERICKSON | John Erickson, DTN 232-2590 | Wed May 22 1991 10:41 | 57 |
| I really amused by the number of SITE-SPECIFIC conference-room
booking programs floating around this company! It seems that
some sites have generated their own, probably cranked out during
a few lunch breaks by some wizard, while others have borrowed
the programs produced by the wizards of other sites!
My first comment is the following --- if you _have_ a conference
room program (here at ACO it is "conf") BE THANKFUL! A few years
ago at MOO they _tried_ to bring it on line, but many secretaries
and managers when bezerk trying to transfer their regular
meetings (at MOO managers love to book out, say, _six_months_ in
advance) from the paper books to the system, while other folks
were booking to get work done. Sadly, the powers that be wimped
out and bagged the effort. Bookings at MOO are still done in
paper books, and you must walk to the guard's desk to see if a
room is available.
I think a CENTRALIZED SYSTEM is called for. People have
expressed concern that such a system would be abused --- I can
appreciate their concern, and in some situations I'm convinced
that abuse has taken place (ie: LKG), but I believe the vast
majority of inter-site bookings are warrented.
I can think of a number of instances at which _I_ called a
meeting, but the majority of attendees were from ANOTHER SITE.
It was appropriate for _me_ to book a room at _their_ site, but
the easiest way to do it was to get one of themto grab the room.
That's not only inconvenient for me, it's a rude imposition!
Someone jokingly referred to "CHARGING" for rooms. I know of at
least one site where this is in fact the practice --- in the case
of CRs "owned" by a training organization. The reason --- to pay
for "overhead." Since training in CRs is the break-and-butter of
training groups, I believe scheduled courses _must_ have priority
access to rooms. But if training courses are not in session,
those rooms should be available, to _anybody_, at zero "cost."
Dealing with CR ABUSE is a toughie. I know of a few instances in
which several managers booked rooms for an extended period, with
_no_intention_ of using the room --- it was a safety valve just
in case a "Friday Meeting" might happen. It was a joke! If I
ever had to have a project-related meeting I knew I could
schedule it for that time, because I knew that the management in
question would never show. I must note that I have adopted a
more orderly approach --- if I suspect a room is regularly unused
by a certain party, I approach them and ask what their intentions
are. In more than one case they have realized that an oversight
had occurred and they have withdrawn their reservations. That
was at ACO, by the way...
I apologize for the rambling. I'm just another worker bee who
hopes that we can figure out an intelligent solution to this CR
booking mess!
Have a GREAT one!
John
|
1473.25 | Centrally Controlled? At DEC? | TOOK::DMCLURE | Work to build the net | Wed May 22 1991 19:01 | 24 |
| > I think a CENTRALIZED SYSTEM is called for. People have
> expressed concern that such a system would be abused --- I can
> appreciate their concern, and in some situations I'm convinced
> that abuse has taken place (ie: LKG), but I believe the vast
> majority of inter-site bookings are warrented.
I work at LKG, and believe me, there are so many meetings constantly
going on around here that you'd think you were at DECworld or something!
Not only is it impossible to "grab a room for a quick project meeting",
but it is also extremely hard to get a decent parking space when these
intersite meetings take place.
> Someone jokingly referred to "CHARGING" for rooms.
Sorry, but I don't get the joke. This sounds perfectly reasonable
to me (especially in these days of charging other groups for everything
else under the sun). I say let free market forces of supply and demand
control the problem (only give local groups a discount to discourage
time wasted "bargain hunting" for a cheap room). I realize that such
a policy might hurt groups which are more spread out than others, but
maybe they shouldn't be so spread out in the first place (why pollute
the environment by forcing everyone to commute all over the place).
-davo
|
1473.26 | Try looking in DEC_SECRETARY | SWAM2::TERASHITA_LY | California Native | Wed May 22 1991 21:35 | 7 |
| DEC Secretaries have addressed this problem on their own in the
conference BUGSEY::DEC_SECRETARY [press KP7 to add it to your
notebook]. Topic #300 of DEC_SECRETARY is entitled "Contacts for
Rooms" and is an informal listing of who-to-call for a conference room
at various sites.
-Lynn Terashita
|
1473.27 | And to carry this to an extreme... | ODIXIE::LAMBKE | ACE is the place | Thu May 30 1991 15:11 | 18 |
|
> Each site plans and budgets space including a certain number of
> conference rooms.
About a year ago, the <unnamed> Sales Account team had their annual
planning meeting here in the Fort Lauderdale office's main conference
room.
There is no <unnamed> account in this territory -- they all flew
in for the meeting!
They conformed to the letter of the law -- no off-site meetings!
>For example, it is completely reasonable for a facility to require
>that at least one meeting attendee be from the site hosting the meeting.
This is now our rule here in Ft. Lauderdale.
|