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Archive for the ‘Muse Zone’ Category

Keyboards ‘dirtier than a toilet’

Posted by akpwld on May 1, 2008

Computer keyboard

Many people eat their lunch at their computers, leaving crumbs

 

Some computer keyboards harbour more harmful bacteria than a toilet seat, research has suggested.

 

Consumer group Which? said tests at its London offices found equipment carrying bugs that could cause food poisoning.

Out of 33 keyboards swabbed, four were regarded as a potential health hazard and one harboured five times more germs than one of the office’s toilet seats.

Microbiologist Dr Peter Wilson said a keyboard was often “a reflection of what is in your nose and in your gut”.

During the Which? tests in January this year, a microbiologist deemed one of the office’s keyboards to be so dirty he ordered it to be removed, quarantined and cleaned.

It had 150 times the recommended limit for bacteria – five times as filthy as a lavatory seat tested at the same time, the research found.

Should somebody have a cold in your office, or even have gastroenteritis, you’re very likely to pick it up from a keyboard
Dr Peter Wilson
Consultant microbiologist

The equipment was swabbed for bugs, such as those that can cause food poisoning like E.coli and staphylococcus aureus.

Dr Wilson, a consultant microbiologist at University College London Hospital, told BBC Radio 5 Live sharing a keyboard could be passing on illnesses among office workers.

“If you look at what grows on computer keyboards, and hospitals are worse, believe it or not, it’s more or less a reflection of what’s in your nose and in your gut,” he said.

“Should somebody have a cold in your office, or even have gastroenteritis, you’re very likely to pick it up from a keyboard.”

Which? said one of the causes of dirty keyboards was users eating lunch at their desk, with crumbs encouraging the growth of bacteria.

Poor personal hygiene, such as not washing hands after going to the toilet, could also be to blame, it said.

Cleaning techniques

Which? computing editor Sarah Kidner advised users to give their computer “a spring clean”.

“It’s quite simple to do and could prevent your computer from becoming a health hazard,” she said.

She said dust and food crumbs should be shaken out of keyboards and they should be wiped with a soft, lightly dampened, lint-free cloth. They should also be disinfected with alcohol wipes.

Research by the University of Arizona last year found the average office desktop harboured 400 times more bacteria than the average office toilet seat.

They also found that, compared to men, on average women have three to four times the amount of germs in, on and around their work area.

Posted in Guru of Gadgets, Life Style, Muse Zone, News 4m India, News 4m the World, Uncategorized | Leave a Comment »

Sorry for the In-Convinence…

Posted by akpwld on April 28, 2008

Sorry folks for the delay of few month’s for no news being updated. But from the 29th April 2008 all news reports will be uploaded on time. Thank You for your Co-Operation and we apologize for the inconvinence.

Posted in Business News, Guru of Gadgets, Life Style, Muse Zone, News 4m India, News 4m the World, Sports News, Uncategorized | 1 Comment »

Love & Lust @ The Office

Posted by akpwld on February 4, 2008

That sneaky cherub is working overtime these days.

With the young and the not-so-young, the single and the taken, all spending the best hours of their day at work, Cupid hardly gets to leave the office these days.

He’s not alone. Giving the God of Love company is the God of Desire — fuelling the lust to make it big in the quickest possible time and in the easiest possible way.

Together, the two have got the workplace all steamed up. And in a world of instant linkups and instant breakups, their job’s only getting easier.

What’s love got to do with it…

Ranjana Mehra, 36, a development manager with a BPO in Mumbai, was an easy target last year. Married for seven years, and mother of a four-year-old, Mehra has been seeing a junior colleague since July 2007.

“My husband and I leave for work at 8 a.m. and don’t see each other till 9 in the night. Where’s the time left for love, or even companionship?” she says.

“If I get that emotional fulfillment from someone in office, what’s the harm?” It’s perfectly fine with her if her colleague-cum-partner also gains professionally from their relationship. And Mehra is quite clear that this is a temporary affair, and will not lead to her walking out of her marriage.

Mehra isn’t the odd woman out. A survey on romance at the workplace released recently by staffing company TeamLease had 56 per cent working people declaring that women often initiate an affair at work.

Marking a dramatic shift from the ‘conventional’ romance between a dynamic boss and his young, single secretary.

“Traditionally, men have been known to demand sexual favours, but with women getting more aggressive and dynamic in the workplace, these figures reflect the manner in which women now candidly articulate their expectations,” says Surabhi Mathur-Gandhi, general manager and business head of TeamLease at Mumbai.

Twice bitten, not once shy And once is often not enough. “People seem to be constantly searching for ‘better’ — be it a deal, a car, or a relationship,” says Dr Anurag Mishra, a member of the faculty at Delhi University’s Centre for Psychoanalytic Studies.

“There seems to be a realisation that nothing comes with a lifetime guarantee. Maintaining a relationship takes a lot of time and energy, and not many people are ready to put in that much,” he says.

Saurabh Joshi would agree. The senior marketing executive working in Delhi, candidly admits that he’s had flings with at least two women in his office, and a “sort-of-serious” affair with another one.

“Neither of us was really serious about it. While working together, we got attracted to each other. But when you get serious, expectations come in, and that’s difficult,” he says.

The search for ‘better’, says Dr Mishra, often begins and ends at the office, which provides easy accessibility to members of the opposite sex. As a result, today’s workplace has become the No 1 spot for the married or single to find partners — once, twice, three times or more.

‘Care for coffee?’

For Neelesh Handa, a happily-married branch head of a bank in Bangalore, the search germinated over harmless lunch and coffee breaks with a female colleague.

“With time, I found myself looking forward to these breaks. I don’t know at what stage it became more than friendship,” says Handa, adding, “And I’ve always been against married men and women having affairs.”

Some researchers aptly call this new kind of infidelity the “cup of coffee” syndrome. Dr BS Arora, a psychiatrist at Rupantran Neuropsychiatric Centre, says emotional insecurity is the root of it all.

“Values are changing; people no longer think it necessary to control their instincts,” he says. “A husband and wife are supposed to be physical, emotional, mental, and intellectual partners. And they can be too, if they make an effort. But few realise this,” he says.

Besides, the family gets no place in the corporate setup, not even at parties. “The spouse is completely cut off from an important part of the partner’s life. This vacuum is not healthy,” says Suneel Vatsyayan, relationship counsellor and chairman of the Nada India Foundation that works on gender issues.

“Also, in office, people come packaged. You see their best side and that’s attractive,” he adds.

Politics of romance:

“Everybody wants to be the best consumer today — even in a relationship,” says Vatsyayan. Which is why linking up with the boss for perks and promotions is no big deal.

“Because the goals are temporary, and so are the means,” he says. “But,” he adds, “if you probe the psyche of the person trying to get ahead fast in the rat race, you’ll find him or her looking only for contentment, but in all the wrong places.”

Both he and Arora say this only leads to larger unhappiness.

“People are in denial when they say ‘what’s the big deal in having an affair if it’ll take me ahead in life’,” says Vatsyayan.

Dr Santrupt Mishra, Director, HR and IT, Aditya Birla Group, argues, “An organisation is, after all, an agglomeration of individuals. Aberrations will occur.” He adds, “In a society where people can bribe a constable to get out of a traffic violation or pay speed money to push a file in a government office, why is it so shocking when people use all the resources available to them to serve their purpose?”

Power is attractive. “And so is the idea of gaining from power,” says Dr Anurag Mishra. At times, it might not be possible to tell who is using whom. “But, somewhere down the line,” sums up Vatsyayan, “you’ve got to come back to your true self — just as the story unfolded in that film, Life in a … Metro. Everybody’s chasing something, and it turns out that all they’re looking for is stability.”

© Copyright 2008 HT Media Ltd. All rights reserved.

Posted in Life Style, Muse Zone | 1 Comment »

Will affair with boss fetch a salary hike?

Posted by akpwld on February 4, 2008

For a significant section of India’s corporate sector, romancing a colleague, or even the boss, is all in a day’s work, according to a survey, Romance at Workplace, conducted by staffing company TeamLease Services.

A third of those surveyed also saw no harm in romancing a married colleague, while 44 per cent said an affair was often a strategic move to climb the corporate ladder.

The first in a series of surveys aimed at understanding the country’s new corporate world, the study covered 402 men and women from leading companies in Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, Kolkata, Pune, Chandigarh and Hyderabad.

Fifty-nine per cent of executives felt that women often initiated affairs and were equal partners in office romances.

Kolkata led the list, with eight out of 10 people saying that women took the lead.

Asked why an employee would have a relationship with the boss, 59 per cent of Delhiites interviewed said it would be for “quick promotions or a higher salary”.

Ameeta Sinha (28), a BPO employee in Gurgaon, seconds that. She and a colleague joined the organisation around the same time. “My colleague was soon promoted as operations manager because she was having a scene with our grey-haired, hot-shot boss. Her salary now is twice mine.”

A majority of respondents (56 per cent), however, felt that organisations should not intervene in workplace romances. An equal number also felt that such affairs took a toll on the quality and speed of work.

The general opinion said that long working hours in close proximity with the opposite sex led to workplace romances.

“This wouldn’t be the case if an old-economy sector like manufacturing, with fewer women, was booming,” said Tania Gooptu, partner in Aventus, an HR advisory firm.

Younger employees and a higher ratio of women in the boom sectors, like BPOs, consulting and finance, have made workplace affairs a common talking point, she added.

Overall, 16 per cent of those surveyed said they’ve been romantically involved with a colleague.

Mukund Johri, senior executive with a Mumbai-based finance company, said the figure is much more than that. “As far as sex is concerned, everyone is with everyone.”

© Copyright 2007 HT Media Ltd. All rights reserved.

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