Robotic Presence For a Telecommuter
McGregorMortis writes "Ivan lives in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and telecommutes to work in Waterloo, Ontario. But in meetings, speaker-phones suck: can't hear everybody, can't move around, no visual contact. So Ivan made an IvanAnywhere robot to give him a physical presence in the office. If Ivan wants to talk to a coworker, he just steers radio-controlled IvanAnywhere into that person's office for a chat."
The best way I've seen it done is with a big screen, it looks like the two rooms are joined in the middle when it's running.
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Great achievement! If it becomes common I bet on the birth of a skin and cloths market not unlike the one for the avatars in Second Life.
There's even the PackBot model for dealing with people who have really, really messy offices, but that's probably out of my price range.
What's the point of a robot if it doesn't have some kind of weapon? Come back when it can electrocute people from 50 metres.
If everyone is going to have one of those robots, why not have virtual robots? In other words, an avatar in a virtual environment. That's precicely what I am involved in at the moment; we're experimenting with virtual conferences in (please don't laugh) Second Life. Our initial take on it is that virtual meetings are not as good as actually being there, but they are a damn sight better than teleconferencing (which sits way down on the list somewhere between getting a root canal treatment, and dropping a kitchen knife on your bare foot pointy side down). They also give much more of a sense of "presence" than videoconferencing. Plus, they allow for teambuilding events as well.
Sadly my suggestion for renting a virtual meeting room in Sauron's tower (in Lord of the Rings Online) was voted down. Oh well...
If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
It could be fun to introduce him to visitors. "This is Ivan."
What does the robot do when Ivan goes to the toilet? Does it hang out in the mens room? Actually, I've had meetings in there. They're short and don't involve a lot of paperwork. And no bloody Powerpoint.
ok iv noticed this trick works well for increasing post rating: 'il probably get moded flamebait but...' man youd make the worst boss... It sounds like your a bean counter type who immediatly sees the lack of 'productivity' in any new idea. A bit of humor, some new ideas and some novelty go a long way in a workplace, and do a lot more for morale and productivity than robot-like efficiency ever could.
So Skulldilocks threw acid on the schoolchildrens' faces, cause somebody from the bible told her to do it!
Do you actually telecommute full time? Or are you blowing it out your hole because you like to type?
Telecommuting full time isn't like staying home a day or two a week. It's much more disconnected. We're not talking about the social aspects of working (although that's part of it--part of what you do at work is reinforce your opinions of those you work with, and read their opinions of you. It's too bad you've missed this--but it doesn't surprise me, you don't exactly sound like a 'thinker'); we're talking about what physical presence brings into it. You'd have to be supremely inobservant not to understand that people get each other's attention physically, that physical presence is the nexus of a great deal of getting things done in an office, and that being physically disconnected is really distancing from what's going on there.
Video conferencing, shared terminal sessions, conference calls (ugh), phone, IM, email are all really poor at enabling actual work to get done (in my experience, the best is email and some kind of shared authoring system; while no one ever actually gets things done on conference calls and video conferences). Is a robot perfect? No. And sometimes physical distance can be a benefit as well as a hindrance, if you play it right. But if you think that planning and setting up video conferences with a telecommuter is the same thing as asynchronously getting individual's attention via physical presence, well... then you haven't thought much, have you?
demi