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As a minor revolution, the world has experienced open offices where people can see each other, move freely, sit at any table, and the extra spaces help them work together as it is a much more humane environment than usual offices before the change of millennium.
Now, however, the coronavirus has once again made it important to segregate office workers. Tens of thousands of companies worldwide are looking for a good way to restart work on their own sites while maintaining a safe distance between employees.
Photo: Susan Wood / Getty Images
Some believe in high-tech solutions, using surveillance applications and devices, cameras equipped with artificial intelligence to try to filter out suspicious infections and enforce regulations. Who has the money for that?
The cheapest solution is Plexiglass.
Or any bounding screen that forms a physical boundary. Office stands appeared in the 1960s and were originally designed to help personalize workplaces. Later, however, they became increasingly hated symbols of monotonous and faceless work, separate office workers.
Cushman & Wakefield, a global office real estate company, has produced a guide on how to reopen offices after an epidemic, and in addition to disinfection, the screen separating tables has an important role to play. This is based on the fact that more than a million people in China have already received help to return to work, according to a Wired article.
They see that companies that are also facing stagnation in the economy now really won’t have much time and money to come up with new concepts for office equipment, most will stick with the cheap and quick fix.
(Wired)
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Life can restart in the field
Only in Budapest and Pest County will the extension be extended, everything in the countryside will be much more flexible starting Monday: cafeterias, beaches, zoos, parks and even universities can be opened. We have compiled how the country is divided into two. But aren’t the people of Budapest really going on a field trip?
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The mobile phone market has collapsed
There was already a big recession in the first quarter, and only then was the impact of the epidemic really felt.
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