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Well, it is now Day 9 of Bee Watch in my garden. The bee removal people (AA Bee Removals) left an explanatory letter with their invoice when they left and it included this bit:
As we never kill bees you may notice a few bees buzzing around the old site for a few days. This is quite normal and they should soon disappear. We do endeavour to catch the queen and put her, along with all the bees, in a box but sometimes she flies off into a nearby tree and we cannot find her. When that happens the remaining bees will gather around her where they will hang in a cluster, like a bunch of grapes, for a few days.
At this point they are quite harmless as they have no hive to protect. If, however, they are not gone after five to seven days we will come back and remove them at no further cost to you.
Collection of cool and creative product designs that literally represent the products themselves.
Milk Carton
Amazing literal milk packaging concept by Gabriel Lefebvre and Julien De Repentigny. [link]
Periodic Table
Literal representation of the periodic table of the chemical elements. [link]
Fruit Juice Packaging
Japanese designer Naoto Fukasawa has designed a series of literal fruit juice packages that have the look and feel of the fruit they contain. [link]
Speech Bubble Speaker
Cool speakers that plug directly into your computer or MP3 player. [link]
Remote, Radio, and Subwoofer
These interesting concepts for electronic devices are a part of “Used as Read” series. [link]
“Book End” Bookends
Organize your novels with a pair of handy metal “BOOK ENDs”. [link]
Chair
Eric Ku created a chair by assembling the redesigned alphabets. [link]
Hot Radiator
Clever radiator design informs everyone that the radiator it hot. [link]
Shelf
Da-Eun Song has designed a cool shelf that spells out “shelf”. [link]
“Table” Table
Literal interpretation of a table designed by Toshinori Kamiya. [link]
More than half of office workers use sites like Twitter and Facebook for personal use during the working day, and admit wasting an average of 40 minutes a week each.
One in three of the 1,460 office workers surveyed also said they had seen sensitive company information posted on social networking sites, leading to fears about how workers use the internet.
Philip Wicks, consultant at Morse, the IT services and technology company who commissioned the survey, said the true cost to the economy could be substantially higher than the £1.38bn estimate. “When someone is asked for their own use they say around 40 minutes a week, but when asked about their colleagues they say they say up to an hour a day. We have used the lower of those figures rather than the high point," he said.
“It is the sort of thing people constantly use which means that its not quite the same as doing a crossword, where you spend half an hour on it and it is finished. When it comes to an office environment the use of these sites is clearly becoming a productivity black hole. Social networking can be a cause for good when it is used professionally but I think organisations need to wake up – that is not the way it is always being used.”
David Clubb, managing director of Office Angels, the recruitment firm, added: "As younger generations join the workplace, I believe UK businesses will, inevitably, have to embrace social networks, recognising the benefits of providing staff with well deserved downtime, but also their potential for business networking.”
[Three quarters of the office workers surveyed said their employer had not given them any specific guidelines on how to use Twitter, but 84 per cent believed it should be up to them what they post online.
It would be easy to simply dismiss surveys like this with the technical expression "what a load of bollocks." Some people will look at the details with some alarm, though, and will think it confirms their worst suspicions that employees everywhere are not to be trusted.
What a sorry state of affairs!
But two bright spots - David Clubb's reality quote that illustrates how you ought to look at tools like Twitter; and the reality picture in the last paragraph: 75% of those surveyed reporting that their employer has offered no guidance on how tools like Twitter fit into the workplace.
Makes this post on my blog seem so timely: A clear call to action for social media guidelines and training
Opportunity knocks, everyone!
I am on a minimalist kick these days as I try to unload some of the more complex stuff I use in favor simple tools that are "good enough." A lot of this involves moving to anything that works with plain text since it works well everywhere and it's inherently portable. There's actually an active crowd of minimalist curators out there and, with their help, I am finding all kinds of cool stuff in this genre.
Part One
An elegant washbasin design by High Tech.