The Social Life of Information: Home Alone |
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Jon Marbach
Homework 14
Nothing - great material!
a. The workplace still has its place.
b. Computer systems that support workplace activities must be designed with the social and collaborative aspects of the workplace in mind, rather than treating them as processes that are done start to finish by one person in isolation.
c. New technology in the workplace can introduce hidden costs that are unanticipated and aren't accounted for.
A friend of mine who worked (still does...) as a programmer did quite a bit of his work from home and was told me once that he had to manage his "spaces" correctly to get work done. What I mean is, he found that if he used a physical location - say his bedroom - as a space where he played computer games, he would have a difficult time getting work done there. So he established a place in his house that was his work space and would move his laptop there to get his work tasks done. Then, if he wanted to use the computer more casually, he would move it back to his "play" space.
At first I thought that was a little extreme but then I realized that I do the same thing, and I assume most people do. When I was an undergrad, sometimes I would bring work home when I went to visit my family, and I never got it done, mainly because my house just wasn't a place that I did work.
This potentially explains part of the advertising company's failed experiment in that may people need to associate a space with their work.
Not that it's an extremely novel idea, but have a different "skin" on a computer's desktop to differentiate "work" mode and "play" mode might help establish two environments with different purposes.
Otherwise, my friend has had quite a bit of "luck" with working partially from home and that may be because since the article was written, technologies like VPNs have matured. On the other hand, he's a "computer guy" and might have just worked through difficulties without complaining.
Note: There was something else I thought of but while I was working on this earlier the swiki went down, so I wrote in some answers, hit submit, got a page not found error, and lost everything I had typed! Talk about lost productivity! Arrgh!