4.4.06 | Washington Post | The reason I can't blog this morning is that I have just moved to a new
cubicle and am totally out of sorts . . . . I don't want to be seen as a Work
Station Complainer. Every office has people whose work stations are, at
least in their imagination, killing them.. . . Changing workstations can be every bit as emotionally devastating as
going through a divorce. There is a pervasive strangeness to
everything. There are unfamiliar sounds, light hitting the eyes at an
odd angle, peculiar vapors from a photocopier, plus the reorientation
of the body with regard to magnetic North.
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7.12.05 Lighting Research Center The Lighting Research Center conducted a field study to identify simple retrofit solutions that save lighting energy in open-plan offices while providing enough brightness to give workers a cheerful impression of the space.
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7.12.05 Lighting Research Center A recent field study from the Lighting Research Center demonstrated that LEDs can be effective, energy-saving alternatives for incandescent downlights in elevators. The field installation using prototype LED fixtures showed an energy savings of 45
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2.9.05 Forbes Should companies let a bunch of amateurs design their products? Up to a point, yes. But they're doing it, letting customers put in their two cents on cars, insurance products, fast food, toys and appliances. Maybe it's an act of desperation, but they have concluded
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1.25.05 | New York, NY | A new book documents Herman Miller's successful use of design to solve business problems and lead the creative process. Herman Miller: The Purpose of Design (published by Rizzoli International and available now through booksellers) details how the company's focus on design in problem solving has successfully guided it through decades of growth and change. Author John Berry, a 16-year employee of Herman Miller through the mid-1990s, credits the company's ability to create breakthrough products to its skill in asking the right questions and identifying the right problems to solve.
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9.9.04 | SAN JOSE, CA | Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd. has announced the world's first mobile phone to sport a tiny hard drive. With the built-in 1-inch, 1.5-gigabyte hard disk, the SPH-V5400 could store about 15 times more data than conventional handsets -- everything from digital music files and photos to video, Samsung said.
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