Saturday, December 3, 2011

Coworking: the pivot in today’s transformation of work?

by officePROhub.com on 12/03/2011 - 09:43 pm

Tags: Cloud Computing, Serviced Office Space, Virtual Office

 

There are a a set of work-related trends that seem to sketch a scenario that could mean the end of of the office.

A recent Gallup study found that 71 percent of US workers are “not engaged” or are “actively disengaged” in their work. This suggests that only a third of American workers are deeply engaged in their jobs, which is at least a serious challenge for businesses, and perhaps a serious threat. And the proportion of disengaged seems to be rising.

New scientific evidence is emerging about the benefits of telework (or telecommuting), supporting anecdotal knowledge about workers’ desire to work outside of the office. (We’ll be digging more into these kinds of topics at Net:Work on Dec. 8.) Stanford University partnered with a Chinese travel agency to find out if teleworkers were more productive, as reported by Ray Fisman at Slate:

Within a few weeks, the performance of the telecommuting group started to pull away from their cubicle-bound counterparts. Over the duration of the experiment, home workers answered 15 percent more calls, partly because each hour was 4 percent more productive, and partly because home office employees spent 11 percent more time answering phone calls. (Home workers took fewer breaks and sick days, rarely arrived late to their desks, and had fewer distractions.) While answering more calls, the distractions of home life had no impact on the quality of service: The home-work group converted phone calls into sales at exactly the same rate as those in the office. And employees themselves liked the arrangement better, making it look like a win-win for the company. The home-work group reported less “work exhaustion,” a more positive attitude towards their jobs, and were nearly 50 percent less likely to say they were planning to quit at the end of the eight months. (In fact the quit rate among home-office workers during the experiment was about one-half of what it was for those making the commute.)

And the same sort of business thinking that is interested in productivity of telework also starts to extrapolate about the impacts. If 40 percent of workers — in general — are working out of the office, that means 40 percent of office space — and associated expenses, like furniture, energy, and cleaning — might be productively invested elsewhere. In a 2007 Businessweek report, it was estimated that as much as 60 percent of offices space is “a dead zone of darkened doorways and wasting cubes,” and some have estimated that $600B is wasted in direct costs, leaving aside the externalities like impact to the environment, and the costs that employees incur commuting.

Sara Horowitz recently made the case that we really don’t know the makeup of the US workforce any longer, since the US government stopped counting independent workers in any systematic way. However, her research at the Freelancers Union — she’s the founder — indicate that as much as one third of our workforce participates in the rapidly growing freelance economy.

Connecting The Dots

These seemingly independent trends are tied together by the changing mindset of the people doing the work. Young people in particular are increasingly disinclined to commute to a distant office for the sake of ‘face time’, but many people of all ages have personal reasons for wanting to work in a ‘results-only work environment’, where getting the job done becomes the core principle surrounding work.

Giving workers more control of their lives — giving them back many hours of time per week not spent in commuting and pointless meetings, letting them decide when to do what, and putting money in their pockets by cutting commuting costs — has a very serious impact on morale. As the Chinese travel agency example shows, many of the workers reported less ‘work exhaustion’ and were less likely to quit. That seems like a direct antidote to the unengagement risks that Gallup reports US companies are running.

And people moving into telework and results-only work models will need new tools — like the stream-based work media tools I discussed in a recent post here on GigaOM. But with ubiquitous connectivity, mobile devices, and the proliferation of work media, the technological infrastructure to support telework is very low-cost, and requires basically zero training.

What’s Missing? The Second Place.

But there is a factor that is a potential hiccup. Many folks that adopt a telework or freelance work model and opt to work from home quickly come to miss the social aspect of their old work place.

In the US and Western countries, there has been a growing adoption of coworking spaces, where freelancers, employees of small businesses, or teleworkers can get the best of both worlds: they can work from a work space close to their home — thereby avoiding a long distance commute — but at the same time they can have the support and stimulation that comes from social interaction with well-known people other than your family.

Ray Oldenburg, the urban sociologist, is best known for his notion of the Third Place, like the corner bar, the cafe, or the barber shop, where we can interact with people that we don’t know well, and perhaps with whom we have little in common. He argued that such places are critically import to the health of cities and out societies. He took almost as a given that people would continue their relationship with First and Second Places, the home and the workplace, respectively. But the trends of telework and freelancing means that an increasing means the more people are spending less time in official Second Places, and more at home and Starbucks. But as wonderful as working in a café is, there is definitely a great deal missing.

So it’s no real surprise that the coworking movement is growing at a pace that seems closely linked to the number of people jumping into telework or out of the traditional workplace. Deskmag states there are now more than 1,100 coworking spaces worldwide, more than double the number in 2006. Loosecubes, a service set up to help people find coworking spaces, is tracking over 1,400 locations in over 500 cities, globally.

According to Carsten Foetrsch of deskmag, 72 percent of all coworking spaces become profitable after 2 years of operation, and for privately-run spaces, the number is even higher: 87 percent . So the economics for those interested in setting up and running coworking spaces is compelling.

A Virtuous Cycle?

Looking from a economics viewpoint, all the players have economic motivations to support coworking:

  • The office worker saves significant expense and time by decreasing commute time, and those with the longest commutes should have the strongest motivation to shift to telework. Therefore, there is a steady migration to telework as businesses adopt policies to support it.
  • Businesses have a strong incentive to increase employee morale and productivity, and to decrease expenses related to the increasingly large percentage of their office space that is underutilized. Even if businesses have to subsidize coworking space use by teleworkers, the net savings are significant.
  • As the number of freelancers and teleworkers increase, the demand for coworking space grows, since people need the strong social connections historically offered in the workplace, not just the chance connections afforded by sharing a table in Starbucks.
  • Entrepreneurs have strong incentives to create coworking spaces: partly to serve as their own base of operations, but also as a business proposition of its own. Note that the desire of businesses to shed unneeded office space in our down economy also provides lower cost space in which to set up shop.

When you look at it as a system, coworking is a complex societal dance, where the various players are each seeking to  maximize their personal economic situation, and it leads to a new social reintegration. And the result of this migration of workers from the office to the coworking space is a net benefit for the world, too: the decrease in energy use for the unused office space and the decrease in commuting translates into decreased carbon footprints for all involved.

Coworking may turn out to be the pivot in today’s post-industrial transformation of work: a shining example, perhaps, of how large-scale positive change at the societal level can emerge peacefully from the independent pursuit of personal ends.

Stowe Boyd writes and speaks about social tools and their impact on media, business and society. A GigaOM Pro analystBoyd also writes at stoweboyd.com and is working on a new book about the rise of a socially augmented world, called Liquid City: A Liquid, Not A Solid; A City, Not A Machine. Stowe will be speaking about co-working at Net:Work. 

Image courtesy of Flickr userRob Pearce.

i2 Office to debut in Manchester

Overview

Published: 12/03/2011

Photos

Fastest growing serviced office operator establishes presence in the North West

Article posted: 02 Dec 2011

i2 Office is set to make its North West debut with the opening of a new business centre providing serviced offices in Manchester city centre at Chancery Place. i2 Office has taken approximately 15,000 sq ft across two floors in the 14 storey Grade A building, affording excellent views of the Manchester skyline. Fit out of the new centre is already underway with an official opening planned for early 2012.

Philip Grace, CEO of i2 Office, commented: “i2 Office has already expanded its network North and South, from Glasgow to Greenwich, and we are delighted to be adding Manchester to our growing number of centres.  Manchester is a major business hub for the North of England and our new centre will be perfectly located in the heart of the city’s business centre. We look forward to welcoming our first clients in 2012.”

Located in Manchester’s traditional business quarter, Chancery Place is a modern design statement set in a classical setting. The building, which is owned by Irish Property Firm Alanis Capital, was designed by award-winning architects HKR with the aim of enhancing the Upper King Street Conservation Area. 

In October i2 Office was recognised as the fastest growing serviced office operator by leading managed IT and communications services firm Essensys.

i2 Office launched its first centre in the prestigious Vizion MK development to provide serviced offices in Milton Keynes in 2009. Since then, the company has expanded its network to include three London-based centres providing serviced offices in the City of London at 200 Aldersgate, Marylebone in Central London and in Greenwich, plus Grade A business centres in prestigious premises providing serviced offices in Leeds and Glasgow, with a number of new centres planned.

i2 Office, known for its focus on leveraging technology to enhance its service levels, has also secured partnerships with the Institute of Directors to create member Hubs at its serviced offices in Glasgow and Leeds.

Mobile printing from Lexmark

Overview

Published: 12/03/2011

Photos

Lexmark has announced the Lexmark Mobile Printing App for Android and iOS smartphones which allows for wireless printing over a WiFi network.


Lexmark has announced the availability for its Lexmark Mobile Printing App for both Android and Apple iOS.

The Lexmark Mobile Printing App, which is designed for Android and Apple iOS smartphones and tablets, allows you to print from virtually anywhere, with the device and the printer in the same WiFi-network. The new App works with the Lexmark Pro719 or Pro919 all-in-one (AIO) inkjets, soon to be launched in South Africa, and most Lexmark laser printers introduced since 2005.

The App makes it easy to “locate” a print device, add it to your list of preferred printers, and send pdf, tiff, or jpeg file formats for quick, on-demand printing.

Apps for Android and Apple are available for free and easy to download from the Android App Store or the iTunes Store.

Tablets, smartphones and cloud-based technology are changing the way small businesses and enterprises manage their day-to-day activities. For those on the go, moving between locations requires a greater need to access and produce documents anytime, anywhere with ease.

In today’s unwired world, the use of technology to quickly complete tasks is a new prerequisite to doing business. The new Lexmark Mobile Printing App, which works on both Lexmark inkjet and laser compatible products, has simplified wireless printing to meet the needs of any size business.

This new mobile print capability for Lexmark’s latest AIO inkjet technology, along with the Lexmark cloud-based Print Release solution announced in October, are among many Lexmark solutions designed  to help  small and medium businesses and enterprises be more efficient, saving them time and money.

Teknik extends furniture collection

Overview

Published: 12/03/2011

Photos

Office furniture distributor adds two modern packages for office environment

 

Office/SOHO furniture distributor Teknik Office has launched new ranges of office and home office desking for the UK market in conjunction with a major European manufacturer.

Teknik's contemporary collection includes Mura - a white office desk and storage system with walnut, and Perfect - a package that comes in cherry-red with grey. Both have been designed for suitability for modern offices or the home study.

Mark Galliano, MD at Teknik said: "We have built our business on exemplary customer service and high quality product so it was important to us to ensure we launched quality furniture with an efficient and cost effective supply chain. Both these collections fit the bill and we are excited to share these products with our existing and new customers."

Galliano continues: "Both our ranges fit perfectly into either a small office or home study, we can also provide suitable quality seating to compliment the ranges."

Mura and Perfect are stocked in the UK and are available on a next day express delivery service. Online traders are able to access a free download of images from the Mura and Perfect collection from www.teknikoffice.co.uk

Friday, December 2, 2011

Fuji Xerox Launches Five Models of Compact and Stylish A4 LED Multi- and Single-Function Printers

by officePROhub.com on 12/02/2011 - 07:41 pm

Tag: Copiers

Dec 01, 2011 TOKYO — On December 8, Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd. will launch five models of its new DocuPrint series, A4 LED (Light-Emitting Diode) multi- and single-function printers, for the Japanese market, following their success in the overseas market since November last year.

The five models include three color models--DocuPrint CM200 fw (multifunction), DocuPrint CP100 b / CP200 w (single-function)--and two monochrome models--DocuPrint M200 fw (multifunction) and DocuPrint P200 b (single-function). Featuring top-level reduced size and weight in their class, as well as the stylish design that can suit to any locations, Fuji Xerox will provide affordable new series to meet the demands of small-and medium-sized businesses (SMB) users, including SOHOs, shops, studios and receptions of public utility services.

The LED printhead and frameless structure enabling compact and lightweight body and high quality image output

This new series incorporated a high-resolution LED printhead that was previously used only in high-end office multifunction devices, as well as the frameless structure with a fixed photoreceptor drum to deliver high image quality comparable to high-end models despite their compact and lightweight design.

Energy-saving EA-Eco (Note1) toner and gloss-controlled black toner

Using the EA-Eco toner, which has a fusing temperature more than 20 degrees Celsius lower than the conventional EA toner, Fuji Xerox has reduced the printers' power consumption during fusion. For the monochrome models, the company incorporated newly developed low-gloss black EA-Eco toner (Eco-LGK toner), which offers controlled gloss required for black and white business documents.

Direct printing and scanning from iPhone / iPad / iPod touch

DocuPrint CP200 w / CM200 fw support the Print & Scan Utility (Small Office) for iOS (Note2) to enable direct printout of web pages and photographs from iPhone / iPad / iPod touch. Furthermore, with DocuPrint CM200 fw that has scanning function, hardcopy documents can be scanned directly into iPhone / iPad / iPod touch.

Pursuit for ease-of-use

The new series uses a fixed photoreceptor drum, that reduces the number of consumables need to be replaced compared to previous models, and the toner cartridge is the only consumable that requires replacing. The printers are shipped with minimum packaging materials and toner cartridge already installed in the main unit, which enables easy installation straight out of the box, resulting that users can set them up without complicated procedures.

DocuPrint CP100 b / CP200 w / CM200 fw

The new color models include two single-function printers (DocuPrint CP100 b [Note3] and DocuPrint CP200 w [Note4]) and one multifunction printer with copy, scan, fax and print functions (DocuPrint CM200 fwNote4). In addition to the LED printhead that delivers 1,200x2,400 dpi (Note5) print quality, as well as EA-Eco toner that allows considerable power saving, other features include the toner-saving mode that can save toner use by up to 30 percent, maximum speed of 12 pages per minute (ppm), and a compact design, wherein the DocuPrint CP100 b measures in at a mere 394x304x234 millimeters (mm). In addition to the standard black-based design, DocuPrint CP200 w also comes in burgundy color.

The DocuPrint CP200 w and DocuPrint CM200 fw have built-in wireless LAN feature to provide installation flexibility in an office environment.

DocuPrint P200 b / M200 fw

The monochrome models include one single-function (DocuPrint P200 bNote6) and one multifunction model that integrates copy, scan, fax and print functions (DocuPrint M200 fwNote6). Monochrome models also feature the LED printhead, toner-saving mode and Eco-LGK toner. With a maximum speed of 24 ppm and minimum dimensions of 358x197x208 mmNote7, users can enjoy high image quality with the minimum space. The DocuPrint M200 fw also has built-in wireless LAN feature to provide installation flexibility in an office environment.

Availability

Japan and Asia-Pacific region.

Note 1: Emulsion Aggregation-Eco toner

Note 2: Free software that enables printing and scanning directly from iPhone / iPad / iPod touch

Note 3: DocuPrint CP100 b: 10ppm color, 12ppm monochrome (A4 long edge feed)

Note 4: DocuPrint CP200 w / CM200 fw: 12 ppm color, 15ppm monochrome (A4 long edge feed)

Note 5: 1,200 x 2,400 dpi using the high-resolution digital screen technology

Note: iPad, iPhone and iPod touch are the trademark of Apple Inc. registered in the United States and other countries.

Note: The iPhone trademark is used based on the license agreement with Aiphone Co., Ltd.

Find out more from Fuji Xerox

Pitney Bowes Expands Strategic Alliances to Build Mailer Density for Volly™ Secure Digital Delivery

by officePROhub.com on 12/02/2011 - 07:47 pm

Tags: Cloud Computing, Mailroom Equipment

 Dec 01, 2011 STAMFORD, Conn. - Pitney Bowes Inc. (NYSE: PBI) announced today that it has signed thirty strategic alliance agreements with large third-party mailers for the Volly™ secure digital delivery service. The signed agreements are with large volume mailers and service bureaus that represent over 4,000 companies and consumer brands. Together, these mailers send out nearly six billion mail pieces annually for their customers in the automotive, banking, brokerage, cable, credit union, consumer products, direct mail, financial services, state and local government, gaming, healthcare, insurance, loyalty, marketing, mutual fund, non-profit, payroll, publishing, retail, telecommunications and utilities industries.

"Density is key – and relationships with high-volume mailers and service bureaus will be the fastest route to achieving it,” stated said Matt Swain, associate director, Document Outsourcing, InfoTrends. “Pitney Bowes is doing a great job of leveraging its extensive relationships with high-volume mailers across the United States to help reach the density necessary to make Volly an attractive consumer destination.”

“Building density to create an experience that consumers really use and depend on can only be done with trust— trust not only between solution provider and mailer, but also trust between consumer and mailer,” explained Chuck Cordray, president, Volly, Pitney Bowes. “The Volly™ secure digital delivery system was purposefully designed so that it supports the mailer’s brand while offering a new, powerful channel for customer communications. Brands control their messaging, and consumers control their chosen senders, creating a powerful, interactive marketplace.”

The Volly™ secure digital delivery service is a cloud-based digital mail communications platform that will empower consumers to receive, view, organize, and manage bills, statements, direct marketing, catalogs, coupons and other content from multiple providers using a single application. Volly™ is an opt-in, consumer-focused consolidation service which also includes online bill pay, and will be made available at no cost to U.S. consumers.

Konica Minolta Moves to Greener Horizons

by officePROhub.com on 12/02/2011 - 07:55 pm

Tags: Copiers, Green office products, Managed Print Services, Office Space

Konica Minolta’s ACT office has relocated to a more environmentally friendly office in an easily accessible location. The office is situated in the new development area of Kingston and was officially opened on the 24th November, by His Excellency Mr Shigekazu Satu, the Ambassador of Japan.

“We wish to celebrate the next step of our journey as a business and service the needs of our Government clients. We are all very excited to move to our new offices in Kingston,” said Nanette Bak, ACT State Manager, Konica Minolta Business Solutions Australia.

Previously located in Fyshwick, the new Canberra office in Kingston supports Konica Minolta’s environmental sustainability initiatives. The two year old building achieved a 5 star Greenstar rating from NABERS - National Australian Built Environmental Rating System.

The eco friendly office reflects the same innovative colour scheme of the Konica Minolta head office in Sydney, including CMYK the core palette of the printing process and the main business function of the company.

Konica Minolta is on the first whole-of-government panel contract for Managed Print Services (MPS) in Australia, announced by the Commonwealth Department of Finance and Deregulation. It hopes the new convenient office location will help its business offering to grow and prosper in the Government area while continuing to support the environment.

Printer company prepares for paperless office

by officePROhub.com on 12/02/2011 - 04:57 pm

Tags: Cloud Computing, Copiers, Managed Print Services, software and programs

AS A printer manufacturer preparing for the advent of the paperless office, Japanese-headquartered multinational Ricoh is seeking to lessen its reliance on hardware. Almost 15 per cent of its €16.4 billion in global revenues relates to services, a percentage it is seeking to grow. “It has to become the predominant part of our business, because otherwise we’ll become like the music industry,” said David Mills, executive vice-president of operations, Ricoh Europe. The company is not alone in its awareness of the need to evolve – according to a survey of 567 senior executives conducted by the Economist Intelligence Unit and sponsored by Ricoh, six in 10 respondents believe the vertical market in which their organisations operate will bear little resemblance in 2020 to how it looks today. The “wrenching change” forecasted is expected to include a decisive shift in power to customers, the decentralisation of management and a much more virtual working environment. It could also mean death to the middle manager and the long-awaited birth of not just a paperless office, but one where computer hardware operating off a common server becomes a thing of the past. “We see the changes happening very quickly now. The speed of change is getting quicker and quicker,” said Mr Mills. Organisations that can’t keep pace with a relentless, technology-driven improvement in cost-efficiency will, by definition, disappear, observed the senior executives surveyed for the study, entitled Frontiers of Disruption. The full results will be published next year, but a taster summary contains some interesting predictions. Some 62 per cent of the sample believe that in 2020, responsibility for the delivery of most IT services will reside within individual business units rather than a central IT function. More than three-quarters predict IT services will be delivered via external parties – cloud computing providers, in other words. And most employees will conduct all communications and electronic work using just one device. “The lobby here is for staff to bring in their own equipment,” said Mr Mills. “We say no, but I think you can only say no for so long.” Nevertheless, Ricoh’s client base of its Fortune 500 peers are “still going to need hardware”, and Ricoh’s new generation of products includes short-throw projectors that hook onto skirting boards, hotspot printers to which any email account can connect and portable teleconferencing units that allow up to 32 people to hold a meeting. Document security is “probably the biggest thing” companies want to do, but they’re also “desperate to save costs” – as are public bodies, said Alan Mason, managing director of Ricoh Ireland, which has an office, newly cleared of filing cabinets, in Glasnevin, Dublin. Government departments’ drive to slash costs often translates into a crude fixed percentage coming off all expenditure, Mason noted, rather than making a switch to more efficient processes. “There are fortunes to be saved. But people are so frantically busy with managing their departments, they haven’t engaged properly.”

Basepoint Wins Workspace of the Year Award

by officePROhub.com on 12/01/2011 - 07:44 pm

Tag: Serviced Office Space

 

Serviced office operator Basepoint has successfully clinched the BCA Workspace of the Year Award for their Chatham location, known as The Joiner's Shop.

Pictured (L-R): John Luchford, Centre Manager at Basepoint Chatham, and Brain Andrews, Executive Director Basepoint Centres Ltd.

For the third consecutive year Basepoint has scooped the prestigious gong, which went to Basepoint Ipswich last year and Basepoint Southampton in 2009.

The awards, which have been established for 10 years, were held at London's Park Lane Hotel and according to the judging panel, standards were "extremely high this year, but the winners of each category shone out for their commitment and passion for customer engagement and service".

Nominations for the best business centres are submitted by clients to the BCA, and the 'workspace of the year' award is attributed to business centres that are considered to add value to their clients' business, as well as providing clean, well-managed work space.

John Luchford, Centre Manager at The Joiner's Shop - newly crowned 2011 Workspace of the Year Award winner - said:

"As a newly appointed centre manager, I was content with being shortlisted along with two other Basepoint centres; Swindon and Newhaven. When the Chatham centre was announced as the winner, it was quite a shock and a huge honour.

"Winning is testament to all the effort we have put in to ensure that our licensees thrive within a positive environment. I believe in the opportunities and support Basepoint offers to SMEs and this award is something I will share with all of my colleagues as recognition of all of our hard work and determination to succeed."

The Chatham-based business centre is located in the heart of The Historic Dockyard, and has been providing serviced offices, studios and workshops to small and medium sized businesses since 2009. A total of 44 creative businesses are currently based there, ranging from graphic designers and specialist printers to engravers.

Kodak HERO 9.1 All-in-One Printer

by officePROhub.com on 11/30/2011 - 02:27 am

Tag: Printers

M. David Stone
Lead Analyst Printers, Scanners & Projectors  

Given that the Kodak HERO 9.1 All-in-One Printer ($249.99 direct) is Kodak's new flagship MFP model, you'd expect it to offer more than any of its siblings. For the most part it does, with a big color touch screen for its front panel added to all the features you'll find in the Kodak Office HERO 6.1 All-in-One Printer ($199.99 direct, 4 stars). Well, almost all. The few missing features make the HERO 9.1 a little less appropriate for office use. It's still a good fit as a home printer, however, or for the dual role of home and home office printer for light-duty printing.

The HERO 9.1 supports Ethernet and Wi-Fi for easy sharing on a network, and it can print, scan, and fax, even over a network, as well as print in duplex (on both sides of the page). It also works as a standalone copier, fax machine, and direct email sender and can scan to a memory card or USB memory key.

Photocentric features include the ability to print directly from PictBridge cameras, memory cards, and USB memory keys, and preview photos on its 4.3-inch color LCD before printing. The LCD is also a touch screen control panel. More important, the menus are designed well enough so it's self-explanatory and easy to use.

Paper Handling and Other Features

Office-centric features include a 30-page automatic document feeder (ADF) to complement the flatbed and let you scan multi-page documents and legal size pages. Unlike the ADF on the Office HERO 6.1, however, the HERO 9.1 is limited to simplex (one-sided) scanning.

The other big difference between the HERO 9.1 and the Office HERO 6.1 is in their paper handing for printing. Both include duplexers, so you can print on both sides of a page. But where the Office HERO 6.1 offers a 200-page input tray, the HERO 9.1 offers only a 100-page tray, which is what limits it to light-duty printing. On the other hand, it adds a second tray that can hold 40 sheets of up to 5- by 7-inch photo paper, so you can switch between photos and documents without having to swap out paper.

Two less common features, which are primarily of interest for home use, are utilities for capturing and printing a video frame and for printing an anaglyphic 3D color image, using two photos taken from about three inches apart. Kodak ships two pairs of glasses with red and blue lenses with the printer, so you can see the 3D effect.

Still another potentially important feature is built-in support for Google Cloud Print and Kodak Email Print, which is essentially an extension to Google Cloud Print. Kodak Email Print lets you assign an email address to the printer, so you can send a document to it for printing by sending an email from a computer, smartphone, or any other device with email. Simply send a message to the printers' address with the document attached. And because the feature is built in, you can print through the cloud without turning on your computer, as long as the printer is on and connected to a network that's connected to the Internet.

Print Speed
The HERO 9.1 delivers the same slow speed as the Office HERO 6.1 and Kodak HERO 7.1 All-in-One Printer ($179.99 direct, 3.5 stars). Given the higher price for the HERO 9.1, however, the result is even less impressive than for the other two models. The best I can say for it is that the speed is at least in a tolerable range.

For my tests, I connected the printer to a network using the Ethernet port and installed the drivers and software on a Windows Vista system. I timed the printer on our business applications suite (using QualityLogic's hardware and software for timing) at 2.7 pages per minute, the same as for the HERO 7.1 and Office HERO 9.1. To put the speed in context, note that all three Kodak printers were significantly slower than the less expensive Editors' Choice Brother MFC-J825DW ($150 street, 4 stars) at 4.0 ppm, and a bit slower than the HP Photosmart Plus e-All-in-One ($149, 4 stars) at 3.2 ppm.

 

Photo speed was also tied with the other two Kodak models, and also slow, averaging 1 minute 38 seconds for a 4 by 6. As with both other Kodak models, however, it's worth mention that the driver includes a warning that the Advanced Dot Placement mode that I chose for best quality will slow down the printer. Note too that even in this high quality mode, the HERO 7.1 was faster than the MFC-J825DW, at 1:59.

Output Quality and Other Issues
Output quality was a touch below par for both text and graphics. For text, that means it looks fine at 10 and 12 points for most common fonts, and you shouldn't have any complaints about it unless you need text at smaller sizes. Graphics were good enough for any internal business need, but they showed banding in default mode. If you need output that conveys a sense of professionalism, they're a poor choice for handing to a potential client or customer.

The score for photos was par for an inkjet MFP overall. In fact, most color photos looked better than what you would expect from typical drugstore prints, but black and white output showed an obvious tint, dragging the score down somewhat. Of course, if color photos are all you ever print, this won't matter.

Kodak MFPs are known for their low claimed cost per page. The HERO 9.1 continues in that tradition with a claimed 2.8 cents for a black and white page and 8.2 cents for a color page. Given the low paper capacity and the likelihood that you won't be printing as many pages as you would with a printer with higher capacity, the savings may not add up to all that much over the lifetime of the printer. However, even a 1 cent per page difference will add up to a $10 savings for every 1,000 pages you print, which is something to keep in mind when you compare to the competition.

As should be obvious, if you need high quality text or graphics, need fast speed, or need a printer primarily for office needs, the Kodak HERO 9.1 is a poor choice. If speed matters, you'll be better off with the Brother MFC-J825DW, for example, and if you need a printer that leans more toward office-centric features, you should take a look at the Kodak Office HERO 6.1 as well. If you're looking for a printer for home and possibly light-duty home office use, however, the Kodak HERO 9.1 offers more features than you'll find in most of the competition, from cloud printing to touch panel controls, and it's certainly a capable choice.

Quarter of managers use social media to screen candidates, but legal expert urges caution on discrim

Quarter of managers use social media to screen candidates, but legal expert urges caution on discrim

by officePROhub.com on 11/27/2011 - 11:37 pm

Tag: Industrial Relations

 

An industrial relations lawyer says that while employers are free to use the information available on social media sites to vet potential employees, they should be careful of falling foul of the anti-discrimination laws.

The warning comes on the back of Telstra research that found more than a quarter of the 1,255 recruiters surveyed use social networking sites to screen job candidates, and more than half of these admitted to having turned away prospective employees based on something they've seen on Facebook or Twitter.

The most common reason for this was candidates posting discriminatory comments (37% of employers said this counted against applicants) and inappropriate pictures (31%).

However, the findings also found a third of Australian employers who screen social profiles had hired people based on positive things they had seen online.

Industrial relations lawyer Peter Vitale told SmartCompany that most of the information available publicly on social media profiles was fair go for recruiters.

"It seems to me that if the material is published and people haven't set their security settings to limit who can see what's on their profiles... it's a perfectly legitimate thing to do," he says.

Vitale says a lot of relevant information could be gathered from social media profiles.

"For instance, the fact that there might be particular job experience disclosed on a website that's not reflected in an applicant's CV is a legitimate thing to question," he says.

"The only potential issue would be if the information discloses matters which might result in the candidate having a characteristic which might form the basis of discriminatory conduct."

"For instance, if the material indicated that a person was ill, and the employer took that into account, there might be potential anti-discrimination issues."

He also cautioned against using information protected privacy settings.

"If it's private, you're getting into questions of whether or not there's any attempt to access personal information which might be protected by the Privacy Act," he says.

"But that may be more of an issue for people that run sites like Facebook rather than the people who gather the information."

Vitale acknowledged some might have ethical issues with his support of using social media to vet potential employees.

"Some people would say people innocently put their personal information on the websites and it should continue to be respected as personal and private. Until they change the law, I don't believe that's right," he says.

"I'm not sure how far the law should go to protect people from themselves."

Vitale says when it came to recruiting, there have been no legal cases testing how far employers can go in using information gleamed from social media.

But the broader link between conduct on social media and employment has been established legally.

"We've seen employers successfully rely on information that employees are absent from work, for instance employees that claimed to be off work sick, employees can rely on that to support dismissal," Vitale says.

In August, Fair Work Australia found that an employee's use of Facebook to post abusive comments about a manager at his workplace was grounds for dismissal even though they were posted on a private profile, as the comments could be seen by other workers at the company

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Printing of high quality transistors gets closer thanks to the University of Cambridge

by officePROhub.com on 11/27/2011 - 04:11 pm

Tag: Printers

Inkjet printers used to be a cheaper way of printing out office documents but lately, it seems that these printers can do so much more.  Just recently researchers at the University of Cambridge developed a new type of graphene ink that allows inkjet printers to print thin film transistors with greater electron mobility and electrical conductivity.

According to PhysOrg, the researchers had to break down graphite into flakes, a very involved process. The graphite was broken down “using liquid phaseexfoliation (LPE), which consists of sonication of the graphite in the presence of a solvent, N-Methylpyrrolidone (NMP).”  The result was then spun in an ultracentrifuge and large flakes are filtered out. 

Then the flakes were used in a graphene-polymer ink to print thin film transistors (TFTs) onto “Si/SiO2 substrates and the transparent substrate borosilicate glass.”  The final step was to submit the finished product to high temperatures to remove the solvent.

Inkjet printers have been able to print polymer only TFTs for a while.  But those transistors don’t have the same level of electron mobility and electrical conductivity provided by graphene.  Frankly, the polymer TFTs were “too slow for many applications.”  Graphene-polymer TFTs show more promise.

This was the first time that anyone had produced a graphene based ink that could be used for printing TFTs.  The process was outlined more fully in a paper published on arVix.org.  Further improvements will bring the ability to produce flexible electronics that can be printed on a variety of different materials.

Combining this technology with 3D printing could result in some very interesting new electronics.  Imagine printing the body of a new smartphone with the electronics printed right in.  Add gorilla glass and a battery and you’re good to go.  How about a new suit space printed from a new synthetic material with sensor technology printed right in.

Maybe someday we can use a printer like the Brother inkjet printer above to create replacement transistors for our gadgets.

The possibilities are endless but isn’t that as it should be?

Manila folders going to Manila

by officePROhub.com on 11/27/2011 - 04:01 pm

Tags: Cloud Computing, Virtual Office

Ellen Lutton - From the Sydney Morning Herald

GONE are the days when a personal assistant had to be stationed next to the boss's desk.

Brisbane small businesses and sole traders have discovered "virtual PAs" - personal assistants based in the Philippines, India and all over the world - who do the work remotely, for a third of the price and at twice the speed.

Business owners say they are saving mountains of money by outsourcing time-consuming administration work.

Rod Westerhuis, a local real-estate agent, said he knows agents already using virtual PAs from the Philippines and is planning on hiring one himself in the new year. He said it's a "no-brainer".

"I can hire three of these assistants for the same price I'd get someone locally here in Brisbane," he said.

"It might cost me $700 a month for a full-time assistant and that's inclusive of everything; there's no extra super, sick pay or holiday pay on top of that.''

He said businesses were often reluctant to admit they used virtual workers because of the stigma attached to outsourcing.

"Some people get really offended by it, they think it's unethical. And while it might not be much money to us, it's a lot of money in the Philippines. And it's also about running a business efficiently and effectively," Mr Westerhuis said.

Brett Elvish, who runs his own finance consultancy business, regularly outsources administration and marketing work to other countries.

He prefers workers in the Philippines because of the small difference in time zones (two hours) and because they are tertiary qualified - but he has also outsourced work to the US.

"One woman, I gave her 10 hours of time to do some research for me and said that, once the 10 hours was up, we'd discuss how she was going,'' Mr Elvish said.

"I got an email saying the work had been done in 5.5 hours. At $6.60 an hour, the honesty and integrity was incredible. Why wouldn't I go back to that?"

A former director of a large finance company said he "shudders" to think about how much money was wasted on tasks that could have been outsourced.

"I've run much bigger companies than what I'm doing now and I think about the amount of money we would have wasted on all sorts of tasks … and how much money we would have saved by using these services," he said.

He agreed there was a stigma to outsourcing jobs. "I think there is that element there for some people. I've been asked by people if it is sweatshop-type stuff but it's simply not true," the ex-director said.

"People are very precious about Australian jobs and while I think that's fair enough, we need to accept that the world is now a smaller place.

"There's an enormous range of things that businesses are not taking advantage of. Bigger businesses are often lazy and reluctant to change, rather than having a strong moral aversion to something like this. It's laziness."

Paul Ellison, director of recruitment company People Plus, said the impact on the administration and personal-assistant job market would be "incredibly minimal".

"Maybe, in the more transactional or lower skill set part of the market, it could be useful, but some skills sets can never be done remotely or virtually. A lot of these jobs require an understanding of communication and a compatibility with their employer," he said.

What are your feelings on this?