aggiedata said:
Did they buy 6 months of Taco Bell?
CrazyRichAggie said:
https://regenexx.com/blog/why-i-am-not-concerned-about-the-coronavirus/Quote:
The most accurate data on case fatalities is from the only natural experiment that exists, the Diamond Princess cruise. Why a cruise ship? Because this is a closed environment where we can accurately measure every person who gets sick and know the real number of people who perish based on that exposure.
The cruise ship data shows a fatality rate of 0.85%. All of the people that perished were over 70, which is much more like the seasonal flu. In addition, the ability of the virus to spread was again, not that impressive as only about 20% got the virus. So while this bug is nasty, it's NOT the middle-aged killer that the media has been making it out to be.
SoupNazi2001 said:
Will this virus bring about positive change by making many companies realize that many workers are more efficient and it is cheaper to work from home. With all the technology today, it seems the large office setting seems outdated for most.
Quote:
Around 70 people were trapped after a hotel collapsed in China's eastern Fujian province on Saturday evening, officials said.
Xinjia Hotel in Quanzhou City collapsed around 7.30 pm (11:30 GMT) and at least 23 people had been rescued by 9pm, according to a local government statement.
The 80-room hotel was recently converted to a quarantine facility for people who had recent contact with coronavirus patients, the People's Daily state newspaper reported.
IrishTxAggie said:
My assessment a few pages backQuote:
Coronavirus is ultimately going to show large corporations how pointless it is to make employees come into huge offices every ****ing day when they realize there is no loss of productivity and actually an increase in productivity while working from home. Commercial office building space could take a hit over the next few years.
This idiot as a boss, right? Hopefully, that person has enough sense to tell this guy to leave it alone.brucoh said:SoupNazi2001 said:
Will this virus bring about positive change by making many companies realize that many workers are more efficient and it is cheaper to work from home. With all the technology today, it seems the large office setting seems outdated for most.
Would be nice. My wife's workplace is an hour from our house. She's a graphic designer and almost everything she does can be done remotely. Her work has allowed her and her coworkers one work from home day per week. They recently put a new guy over the whole department that does not have a graphic design background. He comes from a dept. that does not have employees working from home. In true new boss, "I'm going to shake things up" fashion, he's questioning why any of them were ever granted this privilege and who OK'd it. He's looking to do away with it because he thinks everyone needs to be supervised. It's ridiculous and outdated. They are all responsible adults.
wbt5845 said:
Bubonic Plague ended up being one of the great economic boons to mid 14th Century Europe. Maybe this one will fix our Social Security problem?
sawthemoffxx said:
What was the mortality rate of the elderly on the ship? We are all well aware it is not very dangerous for young healthy adults. It appears to be extremely more lethal for the elderly compared to the flu.
Tanya 93 said:I think some people just believe we if we take precautions, that being out in crowds isn't a sentence to illness. I have been out the last two nights and I am taking my son out tonight to True/False. People in the crowds are being careful. That has been my observation. No one wants to get sick. But they also don't want life to end due to fears.Mr.Infectious said:
Public health be damned. People want what they want. The people that can make the decisions to cancel Chicago's SouthSide Irish Parade (huge party) or the downtown parade (turning the river green) live in those communities and are ultimately politicians. They will be outcasts if they "ruin" St. Patty's day. Same thing all around the country.
The masses (and businesses) want a party. **** it, give it to them....let the chips fall where they may.
I'll be at home chilling. I've been in those crowds before. I know what I'm missing. What I don't know is how sick I'll get if the infection is in the crowd. Rather not take the chance myself. Everyone else has to make up their own mind.
It may get a lot a worse and I will see things differently in 4 weeks (after Pearl Jam), but for now, I am not scared of getting it.
Nuclear Scramjet said:IrishTxAggie said:
My assessment a few pages backQuote:
Coronavirus is ultimately going to show large corporations how pointless it is to make employees come into huge offices every ****ing day when they realize there is no loss of productivity and actually an increase in productivity while working from home. Commercial office building space could take a hit over the next few years.
I absolutely agree with this. Once companies see that corporate employees are almost as productive as they were in the office, you're going to see waves of them cutting costs from eliminating expensive, prime office space. The era of the big skyscraper full of offices and dehumanizing cubicles will hopefully come to an end.
The paper about the supposed mutation got pulled. Peer review found some issues with the conclusions.daggertx said:sawthemoffxx said:
What was the mortality rate of the elderly on the ship? We are all well aware it is not very dangerous for young healthy adults. It appears to be extremely more lethal for the elderly compared to the flu.
No data from the ship yet but it depends on which mutation you get
Cassius said:Nuclear Scramjet said:IrishTxAggie said:
My assessment a few pages backQuote:
Coronavirus is ultimately going to show large corporations how pointless it is to make employees come into huge offices every ****ing day when they realize there is no loss of productivity and actually an increase in productivity while working from home. Commercial office building space could take a hit over the next few years.
I absolutely agree with this. Once companies see that corporate employees are almost as productive as they were in the office, you're going to see waves of them cutting costs from eliminating expensive, prime office space. The era of the big skyscraper full of offices and dehumanizing cubicles will hopefully come to an end.
The reason they make people come in is that management wants their subordinates in their site. It's mostly an ego thing.
tmollre said:
Looks like we have our first case in Montgomery County.
Fenrir said:
Were does her "conservative" number of assumed cases come from and how is she so confident that it's a conservative number?
tmollre said:
Looks like we have our first case in Montgomery County.
CDub06 said:tmollre said:
Looks like we have our first case in Montgomery County.
Two of the earlier Harris County cases were at Memorial Hermann in the woodlands.
With Pepsi and Frito-Lay apparently declaring WFH, that will cause peer pressure and a domino effect here in DFW. I fully expect my company will be next at least for "non-essential" jobs. Will be interesting in our case because we keep adding buildings and square footage to our campus with zero thought to WFH policies or even community work space. We are very behind the times when it comes to some things.Nuclear Scramjet said:IrishTxAggie said:
My assessment a few pages backQuote:
Coronavirus is ultimately going to show large corporations how pointless it is to make employees come into huge offices every ****ing day when they realize there is no loss of productivity and actually an increase in productivity while working from home. Commercial office building space could take a hit over the next few years.
I absolutely agree with this. Once companies see that corporate employees are almost as productive as they were in the office, you're going to see waves of them cutting costs from eliminating expensive, prime office space. The era of the big skyscraper full of offices and dehumanizing cubicles will hopefully come to an end.