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2023年5月29日 星期一

人間煉獄:疫情、戰爭、窮困 (346期) :In the wake of the pandemic, people are rethinking their relationship not just to work but to time.國泰航空的動盪與困局中國經歷新一波新冠感染潮,未影響生活常態


This illustration depicts a flower composed of six red clock faces around a central white clock face. Most of the clock faces are missing hour and second hands, which are visible floating away in the background.
Credit...Matt Avery

ESSAY

Off the Clock

In the wake of the pandemic, people are rethinking their relationship not just to work but to time.

I have sometimes liked to imagine the hours in a day, or a week or a month, like swaths of fabric hanging in a clothing shop. Some are coarse and practical, others stretchy and deliciously frivolous. Some are filmy, made to be worn with weightless ease.


空乘歧視風波背後,國泰航空的動盪與困局

TIFFANY MAY

國泰航空此前因香港抗議事件陷入動盪,新冠疫情又給該公司帶來嚴重打擊。近期其空乘人員嘲笑乘客英語水平事件再次令其陷入輿論漩渦,為其尋求重建的努力蒙上陰影。

為什麼移民英國的人越來越多

MEGAN SPECIA

執政的保守黨一直承諾限制移民,這也是脫歐運動的核心內容。但英國去年的淨移民人數達到創紀錄的60.6萬人,約是脫歐公投時期的兩倍。這一數字為何激增?發生了什麼?



 對於許多年輕人來說,感染新冠可能意味著出現一周左右的發燒和其他症狀。最近幾週,人們已在社交媒體上描述自己的症狀,通常用一種聽天由命的尖酸口吻。

更令人擔心的是老年人,他們中的許多人還沒有感染過新冠病毒,而且也許沒有全程接種疫苗。上海華山醫院傳染病中心主任張文宏醫生是中國在新冠病毒問題上最主要的聲音之一,他最近接受中國媒體採訪時說,在最近這輪疫情中感染病毒的人中,有多達75%的人在第一波疫情中沒有被感染。




河南一家社區衛生中心走廊裡等待看病的新冠病毒感染者,攝於今年1月。雖然近期感染病例增加可能會給醫院帶來壓力,但許多人感染後似乎更願意呆在家裡自愈。

河南一家社區衛生中心走廊裡等待看病的新冠病毒感染者,攝於今年1月。雖然近期感染病例增加可能會給醫院帶來壓力,但許多人感染後似乎更願意呆在家裡自愈。 Qilai Shen for The New York Times

儘管如此,據中國商業報紙《 第一財經》報導,張文宏表示,新冠病毒捲土重來“對於我們整體的經濟生活不應該造成巨大的影響,我們也不應該因此過度採取防疫的措施”。

香港大學病毒學教授金東雁跟踪過中國對新冠病毒的響應,他同意張文宏的說法,最近這波疫情的感染者許多人很可能是年紀較大或體質不好的人,他們在去年年底的疫情“海嘯”中受到保護,沒有接觸到病毒。

人間煉獄:疫情、戰爭、窮困 (345期) : 美國計劃推出針對新冠新變異病毒的疫苗加強針。中國民眾淡然面對新一波新冠疫情的到來 Covid Is Coming Back in China. Lockdowns Are Not. 中國異見者紐約脫口秀場場售罄 世衛組織宣布結束COVID-19全球公衛緊急狀態 We’re ignoring the lessons of COVID sewage surveillance. It’s dangerous.




中國民眾淡然面對新一波新冠疫情的到來

中國正在為新一波新冠疫情做準備,一位中國頂級醫學專家估計,到6月底每周感染人數可能達到6,500萬人。但是這一次民眾的心態淡然了許多



Covid Is Coming Back in China. Lockdowns Are Not.

The authorities say that cases are up, and one doctor estimates that there could soon be 65 million cases a week. But China seems determined to move on.


中國異見者找到發聲新武器:他們的紐約脫口秀場場售罄

在中國境內被噤聲,後來流居海外的活動人士找到了新的發聲方式——創作中文脫口秀表演,連接有共同心聲的海外華人。


Preventing pandemics — full stop — will be a uniquely difficult and ambitious challenge for the 21st century. But based on history, it is both achievable and worth aiming for. We have never had more momentum against the scourge of infectious disease than we do today. There are more people across the planet engaged in the development and deployment of technologies against pandemics now than during any other time in human history. These recent advances, accelerated by the Covid pandemic, are reaching an inflection point. By investing in ‌transformative technologies now, as public health has done for generations, we may be able to make C‌ovid-19 the last pandemic.


What if There Was Never a Pandemic Again?

As recently as a century ago, experts predicted that it would not be possible to sustain human cities with populations in the millions for long because of the inevitable spread of disease. But technological changes have allowed us, in the developed world at least, to prevent many such pandemics.

Vaccines and drugs are not the only innovations we’ve relied on for this kind of prevention. We no longer view soap, ‌ toilet‌‌ flushing or clean tap water as the revolutionary disease-prevention technologies they truly are. In the developed world, they are cheap, ubiquitous and mundane. Yet these technologies fight a whole host of outbreaks without our needing to know each pathogen’s name. Epidemics like cholera still occur in the developing world, but this ‌‌is a matter of a lack of global political will, not a lack of technological way.

世界衛生


世衛組織宣布結束COVID-19全球公衛緊急狀態

8 days ago — 世界衛生組織(WHO)今天(5日)宣布,結束COVID-19(2019年冠狀病毒疾病)的全球公共衛生緊急狀態,這是朝著結束疫情大流行邁出的重要一步。COVID-19疫情大 ...


2023年5月26日 星期五

Fax 科技與藝術 DAVID HOCKNEY 1988半年; "Global-Art-Fusion" project (On January 12, 1985, Kaii Higashiyama(東山 魁夷) together with Andy Warhol and Joseph Beuys ).

 

Fax 科技與藝術  DAVID HOCKNEY 1988半年; "Global-Art-Fusion" project (On January 12, 1985, Kaii Higashiyama(東山 魁夷) toge



https://www.facebook.com/hanching.chung/videos/5654540041312064

26日周五4點45,蛙鳴震天......

27日晨5點50,體育館旁賣花/禮的商家已擺好......是畢業典禮嗎?
兩天沒帶手機......
思考科技演進與競爭 (display/connector/ic 等產業); (上述)科技與藝術....

  "Global-Art-Fusion" project 

Kaii Higashiyama

Kaii Higashiyama (東山 魁夷Higashiyama Kaii, July 8, 1908 – May 6, 1999)

On January 12, 1985, Higashiyama together with Andy Warhol and Joseph Beuys participated in the "Global-Art-Fusion" project. This was a Fax art project, initiated by the conceptual artist Ueli Fuchser, in which a fax was sent with drawings of all three artist within 32 minutes around the world—from Düsseldorf (Germany) via New York (USA) to Tokyo (Japan), received at Vienna's Palais-Liechtenstein Museum of Modern Art. It was meant as a statement for peace during the Cold War in the 1980s.[9]

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaii_Higashiyama




9999

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fax

Input (left) and output (right) of a telautograph transmission

Children read a wirelessly transmitted newspaper in 1938.



2023年5月22日 星期一

超越會議技術Beyong Meeting Technology Meetings: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly

超越會議技術 Beyong Meeting Technology Meetings: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly
https://www.facebook.com/hanching.chung/videos/947770149676270

Hanching Chung

中國的唐獎特大號。


馮睎乾十三維度






“Meetings should be intense. There should be this sense of angst, that if we don’t make a good decision in this meeting something bad is going to happen to us.”
Meetings are one of the most universally despised conventions of work life. But it's not meetings per se that are the culprit -- it's ineffective meetings.
HTTP://KNLG.NET/1FN2GDY




meetings

They interrupt flow, and pop up unbidden on your iCal. They tend to convey all of the information you already knew and none of the things you really wanted to know. Meetings have emerged as one of the most universally despised conventions of American work life, and they show no sign of letting up. But if workers and managers alike feel put upon by meetings, experts say it’s not meetings per se that are the culprit. The problem is bad meetings.
Wharton management professor Nancy Rothbard says that if we are meeting more often than ever, it may be because we are now so busy we have to schedule time to simply think. “There are so many demands on us that leaders are scheduling meetings to get people engaged in the problem at hand,” she says. “I think people call meetings so they can have people’s mindshare, when it might have been more efficient to work through a problem independently.”
“We’ve accepted mediocrity around our meetings, and that permeates everything,” says Patrick Lencioni, president of the Table Group and author of the books Death by Meeting and The Five Dysfunctions of a Team. “The problem is too often they are boring, and boring in a meeting happens for the same reason as in a book or movie — when there is not enough compelling tension. Meetings should be intense. Twitter  There should be this sense of angst, that if we don’t make a good decision in this meeting something bad is going to happen to us.”
Bad things, in fact, can and do spring from bad meetings, says organizational psychologist Roger Schwarz, president and CEO of Roger Schwarz & Associates. “When people are attending bad meetings and that is the pattern, they either check out or they act out,” he says. “By checking out they may be physically there but not engaged and contributing.”
Checking out could mean that a group is meeting virtually and “I’ve got you on mute and I’m doing several other tasks,” Schwarz adds. “Or it could be I find reasons not to go to the meetings. In the act-out category is people acting ways that are ineffective. And there are organizational level outcomes. If you have people at the meeting who are not fully engaged, that means they are not sharing relevant information. And if you don’t have full commitment, it takes longer to make decisions and your costs will be higher.”
Meeting Saturation
“A meeting is a place where you keep the minutes and throw away the hours,” author and former Xerox executive Thomas Kayser has said. It’s a widely held view. Many workers would rather be doing something else — anything else, according to one sampling. Nearly half, or 46%, of 2,066 American adults polled in a Harris/Clarizen poll said they would endure “any unpleasant activity” over sitting in a meeting, with 18% of that 46% saying they would prefer a trip to the DMV, 17% preferring to watch paint dry, and 8% stating that they would take a root canal over sitting in a status meeting.
“People call meetings so they can have people’s mindshare, when it might have been more efficient to work through a problem independently.”–Nancy Rothbard
Leadingly tongue-in-cheek questions aside, respondents to the 2015 poll said that each week they spent 4.6 hours preparing for and 4.5 hours attending general status meetings — up from the same poll conducted in 2011, but only slightly. In fact, meeting-weary workers are nothing new, says Wharton management professor Matthew Bidwell. “Meetings have been a big part of organizational life for a long time,” he says. “Maybe 10 or 12 years ago I remember a friend at a credit card company telling me the joke that you knew you had arrived when not only were you spending all your time in meetings, but all the people you were meeting with were also spending all their time in meetings.”
Meeting time studies have charted a rise for more than half a century. Executives were spending an average of 3.5 hours a week in planned meetings, plus more in informal meetings, reported a study by Rollie Tillman, Jr., published in 1960 in the Harvard Business Review. By 1973, the number had doubled, according to results of a study by P.L. Rice published in Business Horizons. By 1989, the typical manager was spending between 25% and 80% of his or her day in meetings, according to “A Profile of Meetings in Corporate America: Results of the 3M Meeting Effectiveness Study,” by P. Monge, C. McSween and J. Wyer.
What might be adding to greater meeting misery today are the dual — and perhaps interrelated — factors of time and technology. There is a general perception of a speed-up in the workplace — that workers are just busier, and that tools like email, Google Docs and instant messaging can get the job done more quickly and efficiently than meetings. (Novelty company Buyolympia sells a blue ribbon with the gold-embossed message: “I survived another meeting that should have been an email.”)
“One of the things that I think is driving people to feel put upon by meetings is that people are generally working longer hours and they’ve got more demands on them, and they are being expected to multitask,” says Schwarz. “And so people look at meetings with an eye toward, ‘Is this is a good use of my time?’ It’s a reasonable question to ask, and for a lot of people the answer is no.”
Rothbard says two factors might be contributing to an increase in meetings: globalization, and the jobs themselves. “Work is becoming more complex and interdependent,” she notes. “When we have more interdependence in work, we have to interact with each other — ‘I can’t do my work without you.’ Complexity entails multiple different specialties coming together. In thinking about what it takes to put together a semiconductor, it is not just one person working in a garage. All of the innovation that comes about to make those chips better comes about because of the interaction with a lot of folks.”
Such interaction often involves meeting across the span of many time zones. “We’re not meeting with the person down the hall; this is not necessarily the person who has the expertise we require,” Rothbard says. “So we are trying to bring the best people to the table, the virtual table, and too often we are having meetings at terrible times. People are twisting themselves into pretzels for a time slot that works for a global team.”
Technology is, she continues, a double-edged sword. “It’s enabling us to actually reach the best people and allowing things to happen that could not happen before, but it is potentially making things more burdensome from a process standpoint.”
Bidwell — who admits that his heart often sinks when he sees a meeting on his calendar, particularly a large meeting — says that meetings can feel burdensome, “because they don’t feel like proper work,” but in fact, they are. “The rationale is coordination, which is a function of organization, to bring together a lot of different people who do a lot of different things. Rules are one way of achieving coordination, but the more complex the issue, the more you have to sit down and work through things. Face-to-face you get the richest communication — you read body language, you learn much more and faster.”
Media richness theory confirms as much. The framework developed by Richard L. Daft and Robert H. Lengel is no less true today than when it was introduced three decades ago — that the more ambiguous the task, the richer the communication medium required to get the job done. While email and calls may be appropriate for certain kinds of questions, they lack the social cues of face-to-face meetings — glances, intimation and bonding — and are therefore not always efficacious to working through other issues. “The potential to have misunderstandings in a less rich media format is huge,” says Rothbard. “When people have these misunderstandings they can blow up, and that’s when you get email flaming, or people sending email back and forth and nothing is getting resolved.” With each step removed from face-to-face communication, something gets lost.
“When people are attending bad meetings and that is the pattern, they either check out or they act out.”–Roger Schwarz
On the other hand, technology may be catching up. Tools like Skype, says Rothbard, have “an amazing ability that allows you to get a lot of information that you weren’t getting over email or over the phone. It allows you to develop a sense of knowing the person better.” Large-scale immersive video screens like Cisco’s TelePresence — which are set up to create the illusion that people in different locations are in a single conference room — provide a richer array of cues. Says Rothbard: “The only thing you can’t do is kick the person under the table.”
We Must Stop Meeting Like This
Workers will go to great length to avoid meetings, and to convince their bosses that they are a waste of time and money. Apps such as Meeting Calc allow users to enter the hourly rates of attendees to come up with a grand total for how much meetings are costing. “It takes a really good meeting to be better than no meeting at all. And this app makes it clear how costly meetings can be,” says the sales blurb. But rather than striving for fewer meetings, workers and managers should focus on being smarter about when meetings are really needed, and on how to conduct the much needed managed interdependence they offer in a more concise, organized manner. “Meetings are the linchpin of everything,” says Lencioni. “If someone says you have an hour to investigate a company, I wouldn’t look at the balance sheet. I’d watch their executive team in a meeting for an hour. If they are clear and focused and have the board on the edge of their seats, I’d say this is a good company worth investing in.”
Lencioni recommends sorting out meetings into four types, each with its own objective. The first is a once-a-day meeting for five or 10 minutes. “Standing up and checking in with each other saves so much time and energy,” he says. “Teams that do this for 28 days realize it’s crucial to keeping everyone from going off the rails.” The second type is the staff meeting. “This is the meeting people always think they are having, but really should be on a tactical subject you’ve already agreed to, to see how progress is — ‘how are we doing on customer service?’ ‘What are our key metrics telling us?’ And that’s all you’re doing.” The third is a longer meeting, a couple of hours long, for big, strategic topics. “This is for ‘what are we going to do about the competition’s new product?’ — to wrestle that issue to the ground. This is why people go into business, but business professors would be shocked to learn that nearly all those meetings happen for only 15 minutes. You need to carve out time to do that right.” The last kind of meeting is a quarterly one, when “the team needs to step away and ask, ‘how are we doing?'”
If done right, Lencioni says, all these meetings combined should take up no more than 15% of staff time. “Do you really think that 15% of your time — if administered with real clarity, solving problems that are preventing the organization from succeeding — that anyone would say that’s not worth it?”
Schwarz notes that “people hate going to meetings and find all sorts of creative ways of avoiding them.” And yet, he says, there is a series of remedies — starting with “really asking the most fundamental question, which is, ‘What does this group have to meet about?’ A lot of times people find themselves in a room where they are not interdependent with the other people around the task, and that is the first sign that you are about to not use your time well and, for that matter, not use other peoples’ time well.”
“Face-to-face you get the richest communication — you read body language, you learn much more and faster.”–Matthew Bidwell
Once you have the right people in the room, the next question is: What is the purpose of the meeting? “That may sound pretty obvious,” notes Lencioni, “but it’s amazing how many times people come together and are not really clear about the purpose. One is to make a decision or have a discussion that will lead to a decision. Or is the purpose to give updates and share information? A lot of times people find themselves in a meeting where the primary purpose is to receive information, and that’s a poor use of people’s time. Those meetings can be easily dispensed with and can be an email instead that people read in their own time. The majority of meetings should be discussions that lead to decisions.”
It helps to give people the agenda of an upcoming meeting in advance, and in the form of a question, says Schwarz. Rather than putting, say, “space allocation” in the subject line of an email, it is more helpful to frame the issue as a question — something like, “How are we going to allocate space on our floor given the new hires?” That way, “people can come to the meeting having thought about the question, and they can figure out during the conversation how to contribute in a way that’s on track. You know when the conversation is finished — it’s when you’ve answered the question. That simple technique can be very powerful.”
Rothbard says preparation before a meeting is key — preparation by everyone attending. “We’re so busy that we just don’t prepare, and when we don’t prepare there is a lot of wasted time. And that’s incredibly frustrating, because the problem is … it’s not across the board. Some people come in super prepared, and those are the people who are most frustrated, while the people who are less prepared are thinking, ‘thank goodness we’re meeting; I finally have time to think about this.’ That’s really challenging, and it’s partly because of all of the pressure on us in the way that the world has sped up.”
Technology has opened up potentialities for meetings that did not exist before, but the development of even more sophisticated technology does not hold out the promise of a rescue from bad meetings. “Because the amount of information flying at people is going to distract them and get them off track,” says Lencioni. “And so having good meetings and getting them to resolve issues is more important than ever. Despite all of the technology out there, the table is still the most important piece of technology.”

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