If the Coronavirus is the "new normal" to expect forever, what happened to all the other viruses that were destined to end all of us?
Cassius said:
Flu tapers off dramatically by April.
This thing is just now getting here. It'll get killed off before it gets started simply by the weather. It'll follow the same pattern as normal flu.
YouBet said: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.
My boss is adamantly opposed to WFH and has actually been trying to propose more stringent rules against it. I've argued with him until I'm blue in the face since I have mostly millennials on my teams who expect it. I think he's about to get a lesson in reality. I was already going to ignore his policy anyway, but I'm guessing this is going to scrap his plans with less WFH by the end of it all.
Nuclear Scramjet said:
This is why this thing is a bigger deal than normal. The flu is accounted for in our need for ICU beds every year. This disease is not and has a much higher demand for beds. It could quickly overwhelm our healthcare system.
It's not apocalypse level obviously, but this will seriously strain our healthcare system and show every last bit of rot in the pillars holding up society. Every problem where we have been kicking the can down the road may come to light. In the long term this will probably end up being a good thing but the short term pain will be large.
It might be right, but it also might be a glitch.tmollre said:
Montgomery County, Texas according to this:
https://www.arcgis.com/apps/opsdashboard/index.html#/bda7594740fd40299423467b48e9ecf6
revvie said:
looking at the numbers. I would like to know what the Koreans are doing different than the Italians. Demographics, early testing, treatment protocols. Similar number of cases, vastly different outcomes. Haven't listened or read anything regarding this.
AG 2000' said:Cassius said:
Flu tapers off dramatically by April.
This thing is just now getting here. It'll get killed off before it gets started simply by the weather. It'll follow the same pattern as normal flu.
Singapore and Philippines say hi. Both the CDC, WHO, and Singapore's experts say no impact on this by temperature.
I agree. On #1, the challenge for most managers is understanding what their employees are actually doing at home if you have a job that doesn't necessarily produce tangible output every day. It gives them angst if they can't physically see folks to at least know they are in the office and "working".Premium said:YouBet said: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.
My boss is adamantly opposed to WFH and has actually been trying to propose more stringent rules against it. I've argued with him until I'm blue in the face since I have mostly millennials on my teams who expect it. I think he's about to get a lesson in reality. I was already going to ignore his policy anyway, but I'm guessing this is going to scrap his plans with less WFH by the end of it all.
Two thoughts:
1. I love the idea of WFH for the responsible - the issue isn't the idea it's the people who are not responsible. Is that a management issue, maybe? I think it's more of a hiring issue. Frankly, the ones who work well from home also work hard in the office. However, the ones that are wasting time at work literally disappear when at home... so in that sense I need them in the office.
2. Additionally, if WFH is the new trend I'll find it less appealing to hire or retain old people who can't figure out technology on their own. I spend tons of time troubleshooting headsets connecting to online meetings, software glitches that require a page refresh, and if it gets more complicated than that - the world shuts down. If Technology built to speed your over the phone/online meeting sales up, slows you down to a crawl, you may find yourself in the wrong job.
In the end this may usher out the olds who can't adapt and bring in the new.
Muy said:
If the Coronavirus is the "new normal" to expect forever, what happened to all the other viruses that were destined to end all of us?
IrishTxAggie said:
Zoom. I honestly think SalesForce will throw their hat further into the ring on this type of engagement soon
HouAggie2007 said:
Teams works surprisingly well. Skype was complete ****
My company has been using slack for over a year and it's great for text messaging, group texts etc. As for actual conference calls or even peer to peer calling it's all dependent on your PC (you'll run into a lot of echo issues).IrishTxAggie said:
Heard good things about Slack for anyone that needs to start exploring these avenues over the coming weeks/months.
Quote:
Age limits for ICU
According to the doctors of the Italian Society of Anesthesia, Analgesia, Resuscitation and Intensive Care (Siaarti) "it may be necessary to put an age limit on entry into the ICU. It is not a question of making merely valuable choices, but of reserving resources that could be very scarce to those who have the greatest chance of survival first and secondly to those who may have more years of life saved, with a view to maximizing the benefits for the most number of people". They write it in the technical document "Recommendations of clinical ethics for admission to intensive treatments and for their suspension, in exceptional conditions of imbalance between needs and available resources". This text was also distributed and published in full on the Siaarti website, and is addressed to doctors. According to the scientific society, the document aims "to provide support to the anesthesiologists-resuscitators currently engaged in managing in the front line" the maxi-emergency "which is unprecedented in terms of features and proportions".
Bernie drooling at the thought of this here.sawthemoffxx said:
Absolute ****show in Italy right now
https://www.lastampa.it/cronaca/2020/03/07/news/coronavirus-il-giro-di-allarme-dei-medici-della-lombardia-rischiamo-una-disastrosa-calamita-sanitaria-1.38563465Quote:
Age limits for ICU
According to the doctors of the Italian Society of Anesthesia, Analgesia, Resuscitation and Intensive Care (Siaarti) "it may be necessary to put an age limit on entry into the ICU. It is not a question of making merely valuable choices, but of reserving resources that could be very scarce to those who have the greatest chance of survival first and secondly to those who may have more years of life saved, with a view to maximizing the benefits for the most number of people". They write it in the technical document "Recommendations of clinical ethics for admission to intensive treatments and for their suspension, in exceptional conditions of imbalance between needs and available resources". This text was also distributed and published in full on the Siaarti website, and is addressed to doctors. According to the scientific society, the document aims "to provide support to the anesthesiologists-resuscitators currently engaged in managing in the front line" the maxi-emergency "which is unprecedented in terms of features and proportions".
sawthemoffxx said:
Absolute ****show in Italy right now
https://www.lastampa.it/cronaca/2020/03/07/news/coronavirus-il-giro-di-allarme-dei-medici-della-lombardia-rischiamo-una-disastrosa-calamita-sanitaria-1.38563465Quote:
Age limits for ICU
According to the doctors of the Italian Society of Anesthesia, Analgesia, Resuscitation and Intensive Care (Siaarti) "it may be necessary to put an age limit on entry into the ICU. It is not a question of making merely valuable choices, but of reserving resources that could be very scarce to those who have the greatest chance of survival first and secondly to those who may have more years of life saved, with a view to maximizing the benefits for the most number of people". They write it in the technical document "Recommendations of clinical ethics for admission to intensive treatments and for their suspension, in exceptional conditions of imbalance between needs and available resources". This text was also distributed and published in full on the Siaarti website, and is addressed to doctors. According to the scientific society, the document aims "to provide support to the anesthesiologists-resuscitators currently engaged in managing in the front line" the maxi-emergency "which is unprecedented in terms of features and proportions".
Not sure why this needs to be political? The reality is there will not be enough hospital beds. There were not enough in Wuhan and they had to build a new hospital.YouBet said:Bernie drooling at the thought of this here.sawthemoffxx said:
Absolute ****show in Italy right now
https://www.lastampa.it/cronaca/2020/03/07/news/coronavirus-il-giro-di-allarme-dei-medici-della-lombardia-rischiamo-una-disastrosa-calamita-sanitaria-1.38563465Quote:
Age limits for ICU
According to the doctors of the Italian Society of Anesthesia, Analgesia, Resuscitation and Intensive Care (Siaarti) "it may be necessary to put an age limit on entry into the ICU. It is not a question of making merely valuable choices, but of reserving resources that could be very scarce to those who have the greatest chance of survival first and secondly to those who may have more years of life saved, with a view to maximizing the benefits for the most number of people". They write it in the technical document "Recommendations of clinical ethics for admission to intensive treatments and for their suspension, in exceptional conditions of imbalance between needs and available resources". This text was also distributed and published in full on the Siaarti website, and is addressed to doctors. According to the scientific society, the document aims "to provide support to the anesthesiologists-resuscitators currently engaged in managing in the front line" the maxi-emergency "which is unprecedented in terms of features and proportions".