My condolences Gris. I'm so sorry about all of this hitting you at once.
Anya ,'Sleeper'
Natter 71: Someone is wrong on the Internet
Off-topic discussion. Wanna talk about corsets, duct tape, or physics? This is the place. Detailed discussion of any current-season TV must be whitefonted.
Yeah, my problem is, if we have GOOD tools, I'm ok with a lot of paperlessness, but I don't always have good tools. Plus I am just enough of a dinosaur that I like to write on things, scribble over them, check things off lists, etc. For instance, in the visits I do, we have a computer system that tracks problems we have to follow up on. I hate it. And in theory, I could review all of them in the system while I'm at those locations, and write new ones, etc. But really what I do is export it all beforehand, print it out, and then make notes on it and enter that info later. Not as smooth or paperless, but so much easier for me.
On a separate note, I saw a link to this today and thought of all the awful things that poor Maria went through, and thought it was a great idea: [link]
Did you notice that in all the photos of open plan offices the places are IMMACULATE? no stray papers, no personal items cluttering up the place ... not all that realistic, in my experience.
You don't accumulate that stuff at all the same way when you don't have a permanent spot. I barely print anything anymore, and when I do it's usually for short term use - almost nothing that is kept for more than a day or two.
On my way home, I swung by the Gap to see about new jeans. I tried on a bunch, one fit fine and was as dark as I wanted, and was on sale for $40. Good deal! And then I got to checkout, and sale items were 30% further off, so they were $27! Suh-weet. I feel sort of bad about buy more boot cut, but fuck it, I like them.
Nice office, Jess! I bet having all that lovely open space is more of luxury in NYC,where people go home to smallish spaces.
I technically have a back corner office (it's the room with the light table and, theoretically, 6500° overhead lighting for art and print reviews). However, the newer computer that I do 95% of my work on is in the cubicle of a former co-worker, so that's where I sit and build my nest out of unfiled paper. I could move it to my actual office, but this is a more comfortable location in the warm months and I can see/hear if people come in the front door.
Ignore any news reports of crazed woman attacking people and/or screaming like a banshee through the Fort Worth Texas area. prepared alibies would be appreciated. anyone with photoshop skills, get to work for documentary evidence.
Being a lawyer, we all have offices, given the confidential nature of our work. I interviewed with three different departments at my company and one of the reasons that I chose the department I did was that I knew I'd get an office in the law department.
I have an office with no windows, but it does have a large skylight.
I think the only people at our firm who have offices are the managing partner and a couple of the corporate attorneys. Everyone else - and that includes division heads and members of the management committee - gets a cube. Some of them are really big cubes, but still.
Our cubes are tall enough that you can't see who is sitting where, so we rely on the stuff people put on top of their cabinets to navigate (plants, binder clip dinosaurs, etc.). We also make homemade signs for who sits where to put at the end of each aisle.
My team leader still hasn't noticed that we put his title as "Zumba Instructor."