201021wbd000

Overstretched

I found this article today during my morning bike ride.  This is very pertinent to me because I am leaving my job with MSC.Software because of these very reasons.  I have included the audio edition (just click play) if you would just like to listen to the article or read the whole article on your own with out any help :) .  If companies do not recognize and adapt to these problems then they will surly be hurting as the economy turns around.

Audio:

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Article:
http://www.economist.com/business-finance/displaystory.cfm?story_id=16163228

Many people who kept their jobs are working too hard. What can companies do about it?

May 20th 2010 | From The Economist print edition

IN GEORGE ORWELL’S “Animal Farm” the mighty cart-horse, Boxer, inspires the other animals with his heroic cry of “I will work harder”. He gets up at the crack of dawn to do a couple of hours’ extra ploughing. He even refuses to take a day off when he splits his hoof. And his reward for all this effort? As soon as he collapses on the job he is carted off to the knacker’s yard to be turned into glue and bonemeal.

“Animal Farm” looks ever more like a parable about capitalism as well as socialism. Everybody knows about the scourge of unemployment. But unemployment is bringing another scourge in its wake—overwork. The Corporate Leadership Council, an American consultancy which surveys 1,100 companies every quarter, reports that the average “job footprint” (what a worker is expected to do) has increased by a third since the beginning of the recession. The Hay Group, a British consultancy which recently surveyed 1,000 people, says that two-thirds of workers report they are putting in unpaid overtime. The reward for all this effort is frozen pay and shrinking perks. The only difference between these overstretched workers and Boxer is that they can see the knacker’s van coming.

So far workers have borne all this with remarkable stoicism—partly because they feel lucky to keep their jobs and partly because they want to save their firms from going under. But the Dunkirk spirit is beginning to fade. The Hay survey notes that 63% of workers say that their employers do not appreciate their extra effort. And 57% feel that employees are treated like dispensable commodities. Half report that their current level of work is unsustainable. People are wearying of frantic reorganisation as well as the added toil—floods of memos and meetings, endless reshuffles, the exhortations to do more with less.

For their part, companies are beginning to notice the downside of all this overstretching. Absenteeism is on the rise. Low-level corporate crime is growing. Corporate loyalty is on the wane. The Corporate Leadership Council reports that the proportion of workers who are willing to put in “discretionary effort” has dropped by almost half since 2007, while the share of respondents who claim that they are “disengaged” from their jobs has risen from a tenth to a fifth. But “discretionary effort” and “engagement” are vital sources of the innovation and creativity that companies claim to value so highly.

The biggest danger for companies is if workers head for the door as the economy picks up. The Hay Group reports that 59% of its sample are either considering leaving or actively looking for a new job—and more than 85% of those who are not in the job market are staying only because that market is so dismal.

Most problematic of all is when star employees decide to look for work elsewhere. These “high-potentials” (HiPos) are doubly frustrated: they have been asked to shoulder a disproportionate share of the growing burden of work and they have seen senior jobs dry up as older managers try to cling to their positions.

A few signs suggest that overstretched companies are beginning to hire again. America added 290,000 new workers in the past quarter. But the growth in employment is likely to be much slower and patchier than it has been after previous recessions. Bosses report that they expect a prolonged period of slow growth in the rich world. And the recession that has battered the private sector will soon reach the long-protected public sector as governments desperately try to bring their deficits under control.

What can organisations do to cope with this new era of overwork? Most obviously they can redouble efforts to make staff feel valued. Cash-strapped companies are making more use of symbolic rewards. Cap Gemini, an IT consultancy, has a “gold awards programme” complete with a public ceremony every six months. This might sound suspiciously like the parades that the pig-dictator in “Animal Farm” organises to reconcile his fellow animals to their desperate lot. But, given people’s worries about their job security, it seems to work like a treat.

A second strategy is to make more use of that old favourite, “empowerment”. This means trying harder to explain why companies are acting as they are. At Dollar General, a retail chain, managers brief selected front-line workers on corporate strategy and then ask them to explain what is going on to their workmates. It also means giving workers some more control over their lives. Best Buy, a seller of electronics, measures staff by their results rather than their hours. Bombardier, an aircraft-maker, encourages managers from different divisions to act as consultants to each other. Cap Gemini gives as many people as possible 3G devices so that they can do their administration while travelling. More companies are allowing staff flexible working hours as a way of reconciling them to added burdens—if they can’t have more pay, workers can at least have more control over how and when they work.

Power to the HiPos

A third strategy is to pay particular attention to high performers. A striking number of companies have introduced “HiPo schemes” to identify and nurture potential stars. Procter & Gamble, which sells consumer goods, encourages rising stars to tackle difficult problems (“crucible roles”). Hewlett-Packard, an IT firm, lets its stars attend high-level strategy meetings and suggest solutions. The companies are combining these schemes with judicious pruning of less productive workers.

This approach is less divisive than it sounds. Most workers are surprisingly keen on rewarding superstars (who hold the future of the organisation in their hands) and on dumping freeloaders. And sensible bosses are well aware that their competitors are already compiling hit lists of high-flyers who are dissatisfied with their lot. All animals are equal, remember. But some animals are more equal than others.

Galileo_Prep-browse

Galileo Probe into Jupiter

According to NASA, the probe we launched into Jupiter sent back a total of 3.5 Megabits over the course of just under an hour.  At first I was like, holy shit thats nothing! But now lets break this down a bit.  There are several amazing facts about this project (the probe as well as the Galileo Project in general).

The Galileo Project was launched in ’89 and the probe separated in ’95.  Ok so what you might ask?  Well after it separated it traveled a full 7 months to slam into the side of Jupiter all the while the Galileo ship had to manuever into orbit over the probe so that at the time of impact it could recoard the data and then send that information all the way back to earth.  This is all after the whole shuttle / mission traveled BILLIONS OF KILOMETERS! (The full life of Galileo was over 4 billion kilometers).

The probe was going 106 thousand miles per hour when it hit Jupiter’s atmosphere, and then it had the audacity to pull a parachute! Once it lost it’s heat shield it started to collect data for 58 minutes.  During this time it went from  -143 C (really damn cold) to 153 C (hotter than your mom and boiling water).  Also it hit a pressure of over 22 times earth’s atmosphere. That’s almost equivalent to diving down to 720 Ft in the ocean! That’s crazy!

From where the probe hit earth’s atmosphereic pressure (the pressure at sea level) the probe continued to decened 143 more kilometers into the abbyss that is Jupiter.  That’s about twice the distance to the International Space Station, whoa. All this while traveling at an average speed of about 160 Km per Hour.

You try and send back 3 and a half megs of data under these conditions.  Oh, and you can’t use any electronics made after 1989.

Way to go NASA.

For more information on Galileo, check out the official site at NASA’s Galileo Legacy Site

Printing Only File Names

I recently needed to print out only the file names of all my files under a directory.  Now, I’m sure there is a useful command directly out of find but I think its just easier to use a find / sed combo punch!


find -name "*.mp3" | sed 's/.*\///g'

This will find all mp3 files and pipe them to sed and replace all occurences of any characters followed by a ‘/’ pretty nifty, and works great.

MensRoom

Men’s Room Etiquette

This makes me sad :(

This makes me Mad! How can something so cool be associated with something so awful! ANGER!

Update:

They both suck…

My Computer is playing Pong with its self :(

Computer Pong

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The Best Daily Show Retort Ever

The Daily Show With Jon Stewart Mon – Thurs 11p / 10c
Bernie Goldberg Fires Back
www.thedailyshow.com
Daily Show Full Episodes Political Humor Tea Party

Ok,

Fox tries to attack Jon, best burn ever.

I was trying so hard not to laugh at work… and I failed.

Here’s a link to the video:

www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-april-20-2010/bernie-goldberg-fires-back

Winscape Virtual Window!

I’m not going to lie, I just copied this from engadget, but it is really amazing!

http://www.engadget.com/2010/04/15/winscape-virtual-window-features-wiimote-headtracking-absolutel/

We have not modified the above picture in any way — Scout’s Honor. That’s a real baby, wearing a real IR necklace that interacts with a real Wiimote. What’s not real, of course, is the view of San Francisco’s Golden Gate Bridge. That is generated by Ryan Hoagland’s DIY virtual window, a brilliant pastiche of interior design, RED ONE footage and Johnny Chung Lee-style headtracking, all directed to your eyes by a Mac Pro feeding a pair of plasma screens. As the viewer moves around, dual 1080p images move the opposite direction, providing the convincing illusion of looking out a real pane of glass at the incredibly detailed scenery beyond. Exciting? Then you’ll be giggling like Jr. when you hear it’s for sale. After spending a year figuring out how to mount, drive and cool the whole shebang, Hoagland would like you to have one too; he plans to have basic kits ready by July for under $3000. Watch baby-powered plasma in motion after the break, as well as a sweet time-lapse video of the build process.

[Thanks, Andy, ArjanD]