首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
At Airbnb’s headquarters in San Francisco, every meeting area is decorated to look, in remarkable detail, like some Airbnb renta
At Airbnb’s headquarters in San Francisco, every meeting area is decorated to look, in remarkable detail, like some Airbnb renta
admin
2016-03-10
73
问题
At Airbnb’s headquarters in San Francisco, every meeting area is decorated to look, in remarkable detail, like some Airbnb rental somewhere in the world. One conference room is modeled on the War Room in Dr. Strangelove. In New York City, product innovation company Quirky’s offices in a former warehouse look like a cross between a hip nightclub and a giant preschool, outfitted with a conference table made from industrial fans and a giant map that shows where your colleagues are going on vacation. The sign on the front entrance says: "Deliveries & humans: 7th Floor. Suits: Go away. "
Technology is giving the office an identity crisis. Even the word office now sounds like something your father went to. "We’re going through a 100-year shift in work," says Adam Pisoni, co-founder of Yammer, which is now part of Microsoft. "There’s a real tension today between old and new. "Or as a recent Herman Miller research project concluded: " Long-established workplace norms are giving way to disruption and uncertainty. "Twenty years ago, the office existed because it was the only place to get real work done. The reason to go to the office was to access information and technology...and other employees. Like an old, single man with a fortune, offices didn’t need to look good to attract talent.
Cloud computing is throwing the last shovelfuls of dirt on the traditional office. All the information and software that used to be locked inside offices can be tapped into from anywhere. Think of all the other things you used to have to go to the office for: a computer, a long-distance phone line, copiers, fax machines, files, mail, an art department that could make foils to go in the overhead projector for presentations in pre-PowerPoint days. Now you can get all of that on a laptop while sitting in a Starbucks. Private offices, surveys show, are empty 77 percent of the time. Starbucks, by the way, has long billed itself as the " third place" in American life. Home is the first place: office the second. Maybe Starbucks is going to suffer its own identity crisis when the third place becomes the second place.
Companies such as Yammer, which makes a kind of intra-company Twitter, and Herman Miller, the furniture maker that invented the cubicle, have been trying to understand the next-generation office. It helps to start with historical context. If you go back long enough, there were no real offices. The Egyptians constructed pyramids, not office towers. In the Middle Ages, people in Europe erected cathedrals. In London in 1729, the East India Company built perhaps the first office building. Still, in those days most professionals worked at home, in what they called a library. Thomas Jefferson had a library at Monticello. The offices of the 20th century reflected the technology driving business and society. The middle part of the century was all about industry and production, so offices looked like Jack Lemmon’s workplace in The Apartment—rows of desks strung out like an assembly line. The 1960s gave birth to the Information Age, and workers were expected to hunker(蹲下)down and think. Companies gave them cubicles. So what now? Information is a commodity. Technology is available everywhere to everybody. Employees don’t have to go anywhere to access other employees—not in the age of Yammer and Skype video calls and Google Hangouts. Companies aren’t even made up of just employees anymore. In this ultra-networked age, a lot of business gets done by a core group from the company connected to a matrix of contractors and freelancers. For many companies, then, the most valuable assets have become creativity and culture. The companies with the best ideas win. And the companies that can carve out an identity and image win.
As designers look at those changes in business, they’re thinking that offices have to be someplace you’d want to go for the same reasons you want to go to a bar, even though you can make a good whiskey sour at home: connections to people, a pleasing place to hang out, and maybe a getaway from your spouse or from that laundry basket crying out to be emptied. Desks and offices are going away in favor of funky gathering spaces and corners where you can take a laptop and think on your own. It has to feel like a place where employees and outside partners enjoy bonding and collaborating, says Ryan Anderson, Herman Miller’s director of future technology. Companies used to spread the corporate culture by infusing it into employees through training, memos, gatherings. IBM even had company songs in the 1930s and ’40s. But if a company is now more of a constantly changing band of insiders and outsiders, the office might be one of the most important tools for creating culture.
According to Ryan Anderson, what should modern offices provide for employees?
选项
A、Connection to the society.
B、A place to link the staff and clients.
C、Training and equipment.
D、Cross-cultural collaboration.
答案
B
解析
细节题。由题干中的Ryan Anderson和modern offices provide for employees定位至第六段第三句。根据该句可知,Ryan Anderson认为,现代办公室应该是员工与外部合作者享受沟通与合作的地方,故答案为[B]。
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/Po7O777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
Thewomanthinkstheimportantthingforinsomniouspeopleisthat
Thefounderofgenerallinguisticsis
The"basics"taughtintheAmericanelementaryschoolsare
Agoodmodernnewspaperisanextraordinarypieceofreading.Itisremarkablefirstforwhatitcontains:therangeofnewsf
Agoodmodernnewspaperisanextraordinarypieceofreading.Itisremarkablefirstforwhatitcontains:therangeofnewsf
Allthroughmyboyhoodandyouth,Iwasknownasanidler;andyetIwasalwaysbusyonmyownprivateend,whichwastolearnt
StephenKrashen’sTheoryofSecondLanguageAcquisitionStephenKrashenisanexpertinthefieldoflinguistics.Somepointsab
破碎的事物就这样印满了重重叠叠的生命的影迹,那么沉厚,那么绰约,却那么美丽。同样,很残忍的,我相信破碎的灵魂才最美丽。我喜欢看人痛哭失声,喜欢听人狂声怒吼,喜欢人酒后失态吐出一些埋在心底发酵的往事。我喜欢素日沉静安然的人喋喋不休地诉说苦难,一向喜
我从小喜欢阅读大人物的传记和回忆录,慢慢归纳出一个公式:凡是大人物都是受苦受难的,他们的生命几乎都是“人生不如意事十之八九”的真实证言,但他们在面对苦难时也都能保持正向的思考,能“常想一二”,最后他们都超越苦难,苦难便化成生命中最肥沃的养料。使我深受感动的
PASSAGEFOURAccordingtothecontext,whatdoestheword"chimed"mean?
随机试题
IntheHarryPotterfilms,HermioneGrangerisbetterthanhermalefriendsandisconsideredthebrightestpupilinhergrade.
简述应激性溃疡的发生机制。
控制哮喘最有效的抗炎药物是
A.溶解、吸收B.分离、排出C.机化D.包裹、钙化E.硬化大块干酪样坏死病变愈复一般通过
拟对某淤泥土地基采用预压法加固,已知淤泥的固结系数Ch=Cv=2.0×1.0-3cm2/s,淤泥层厚度为20.0m,在淤泥层中打设塑料排水板,长度打穿淤泥层,预压荷载p=100kPa,分两级等速加载,如图3.3—13所示。按照《建筑地基处理技术规范》JGJ
“洪堡式”大学的传统是由()传承的。
Withoutanoversizedcalendartackedtotheirkitchenwall,FernReissandherfamilycouldneverkeeptrackofallthemeetings
文件系统对文件的保护常采用存取控制方式进行,下列各项中不属于存取控制方法的是(17)。
In1942,theHMSEdinburghwassunkintheBarentsSea.Itwasonits【C1】______backtoBritainwithninety-oneboxesofRussian
Thecommoncoldisthemostfrequentofallillness.Atanygivenmoment,aboutoneoutofeveryeightpeoplehasacold.Mostp
最新回复
(
0
)