Slashdot Mirror


Dial P for Privacy: The Phone Booth Is Back (nytimes.com)

As mobile phone use exploded and the pay phone was increasingly linked to crime, the booth began to disappear. But things are appear to be changing. From a report: Now, the phone booth -- or at least a variation of it -- is making a modest comeback. When the women-only club and work space The Wing opened its first location in the Flatiron neighborhood of Manhattan in October of 2016, the interior featured marble tables, pink velvet couches, and one small, windowless, reflective glass-doored room dubbed the Phone Booth. One year later, when another location of The Wing opened in Soho, eight built-in, glass-doored call rooms were included in the design. [...]

Other companies that have recently purchased Zenbooths include Volkswagen, Lyft, Meetup and Capital One. The Berkeley, Calif., company was launched in 2016, and its products range from $3,995 (for a standard one-person booth) to $15,995 (for a two-person "executive" booth). The one-person booth is a soundproof, eco-friendly, American-made box that's about 36 inches wide and 34 inches deep, with an insulated glass door, a ventilation fan, power outlets and a skylight -- and it can be assembled in roughly an hour. (It does not, however, contain an actual phone.) Sam Johnson, a co-founder of the company, said it produced "hundreds" of Zenbooths a month in 2017. This year, it's on track to quadruple that production. But he doesn't call them phone booths. "We're manufacturing quiet spaces and privacy," he said.

Zenbooth is not the only free-standing office phone booth in the game. Companies like Cubicall, Nomad, and TalkBox, among others, are offering up solutions to the modern office's privacy problem.

13 of 110 comments (clear)

  1. Two person "phone booth" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Yep, those 2 person soundproof boxes are definitely going to be used for phone calls and nothing else.

  2. No phone? by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 2

    Then its only relationship to a “phone booth” is the rough dimensions. But I suppose that sounds better than calling it a “half closet”.

    So this is how companies who’ve stripped away every vestige of privacy from their employees can pretend to give it back, eh? I bet there are cameras monitoring who goes in, and for how long, though.

    --
    #DeleteChrome
  3. call it by its real use by ganjadude · · Score: 2

    The cocaine booth

    --
    have you seen my sig? there are many others like it but none that are the same
    1. Re:call it by its real use by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      The masturbation booth.

      It would be a lot more convenient than having to wait for the boss to leave so I can use his office.

  4. Agent 86 by ArhcAngel · · Score: 4, Informative

    Maxwell Smart and the cone of silence is making a comeback!

    --
    "A person is smart. People are dumb, panicky dangerous animals and you know it." - K
  5. A few companies bought this product and we can declare that the phone booth has returned?

    This feels like a press release, not news.

  6. Phone booth is never coming back by Comboman · · Score: 5, Insightful
    First a history lesson. Cellphones caused Payphones to disappear. Phone Booths started disappearing long before that (there's a scene in the 1979 film Superman where Clark Kent looks around for a place to change into his costume but can only find boothless payphones). The booths were targets of vandalism and the homeless used them as shelters and/or public toilets. That is why they disappeared.

    As for these new booths, the lack of phone isn't the main difference; it's the fact that they are located in private rather than public spaces. They are not in any way a replacement for phone booths, they are really a replacement for the private office space that disappeared when companies started embracing open-plan offices.

    --
    Support Right To Repair Legislation.
  7. we desperately need by mapkinase · · Score: 2

    We desperately need these at work.

    --
    I do not believe in karma. "Funny"=-6. Do good and forbid evil. Yours, Oft-Offtopic Flamebaiting Troll.
  8. Alternatives to pissing money away... by geekmux · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "...products range from $3,995 (for a standard one-person booth) to $15,995 (for a two-person "executive" booth)"

    So, after you destroyed business privacy by embracing the open-floor plan, your answer is to build obscenely priced closets?

    Kind of makes you wonder how much it would cost to throw up some drywall and mount some doors and you know, give employees the privacy of an office again.

    Or better yet, grow the hell up and learn to properly measure performance and manage employees working remotely. We sure as hell could use a few less million cars on the road every day.

    1. Re:Alternatives to pissing money away... by lgw · · Score: 2

      Oh, and neither is the proper syntax for incrementing a variable, because 'i' is not a proper variable name in the first place.

      "i" is indeed the correct variable name for the index into an array (and "j" and "k" for nested indices). Its the convention from math, and is idiomatic - anything else is needlessly confusing. Not that you loop on the index into an array much in modern programming languages. Similarly, "x" and "y" are perfectly fine for variables holding geometric coordinates.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    2. Re: Alternatives to pissing money away... by geekmux · · Score: 2

      I'm glad my boss doesn't allow remote work.

      Despite everything she claims, on the few occasions I've had a chance to work from home I can't keep my wife from bothering me every 10 minutes. At least when I'm at work I can ignore the text messages while I focus on my job, and headphones keep most of the random office drop-ins at bay.

      I guess if I was single it wouldn't be too bad, but I detest having to use a VPN and the upload speeds on home internet make a lot of things painful. Unless work was going to pay for a nice fast connection, docking stations, monitors, etc. I'd rather just go to the office.

      How many hours are wasted every month by you sitting behind a steering wheel in traffic, commuting to and from an office every day? A full-time employee with an hour-long commute (not uncommon) equals 40 hours a month wasted. When I was able to work remotely, I also pocketed upwards of $200 a month in gas and vehicle maintenance savings. I also used an hour out of every morning to work out, so it gave me considerable health benefits as well.

      When it comes to the productivity gains and happy employees, it's not hard at all to justify a company subsidizing faster internet, and one-time costs for docking stations and dual-monitor setups.

      As far as interruptions at home, IMHO that is simply a matter of recognizing and respecting the fact that you're at work during certain hours regardless of the location.

  9. Sexist shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    > women-only club and work space The Wing

    Really? People would throw an absolute shit-fit if there was a "men-only club and work space"

    How TF is this legal?

  10. Re:Sexism by LKM · · Score: 2

    Except that, given how women are apparently treated by men, they have a legitimate reason to have a women-only club. Also, lots of men-only clubs exist.