MessiandNeymar

  • Subscribe to our RSS feed.
  • Twitter
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Digg

Tuesday, July 30, 2013

The new retail life

Posted on 2:01 PM by Unknown

I suppose that whether you consider these to be Signs That The Apocalypse Is Here or Evidence That The Recovery Is Not Jobless depends on your point of view. At any rate:

  • Condoms, iPads, and Toilet Paper: A Day In The Life Of An eBay Now Deliveryman
    The concept behind eBay Now is simple: Order goods online to have them delivered to your door in about an hour. The company has partnered with a growing list of big-box retailers, such as Target, Best Buy, and Home Depot, where customers can purchase everything from tablets to vacuums to laundry detergent. For a $5 fee (not including tip) and $25 minimum order, eBay Now's "valets," which include couriers traveling by foot, bicycle, and in some instances car and taxi, will personally deliver the items to you.
  • I Was a Warehouse Wage Slave: My brief, backbreaking, rage-inducing, low-paying, dildo-packing time inside the online-shipping machine.
    Anyhow, regardless of whether the retailer itself or a 3PL contractor houses and processes the stuff you buy, the actual stuff is often handled by people working for yet another company—a temporary-staffing agency. The agency to which I apply is hiring 4,000 drones for this single Amalgamated warehouse between October and December. Four thousand.
  • Amazon unpacked: The online giant is creating thousands of UK jobs, so why are some employees less than happy?
    People in Rugeley, Staffordshire, felt exactly the same way in the summer of 2011 when they heard Amazon was going to occupy the empty blue warehouse on the site of the old coal mine. It seemed like this was the town’s chance to reinvent itself after decades of economic decline. But as they have had a taste of its “jobs of the future”, their excitement has died down. Most people are still glad Amazon has come, believing that any sort of work is better than no work at all, but many have been taken aback by the conditions and bitterly disappointed by the insecurity of much of the employment on offer.
  • Inside Amazon's Warehouse: Lehigh Valley workers tell of brutal heat, dizzying pace at online retailer
    Both permanent and temporary employees are subject to a point-based disciplinary system. Employees accumulate points for such infractions as missing work, not working fast enough or breaking a safety rule such as keeping two hands on an inventory cart. If they get too many points, they can be fired. In the event of illness, employees have to bring in a doctor's note and request a medical waiver to have their disciplinary points removed, those interviewed said.
  • The Window: Watch the Rebirth of the American Car in Tesla’s Stunning Factory
    The red robots filling the building provide an eye-catching contrast to that stark background. They’re fully automated production systems using the latest technology, and that ensures not just a high level of quality, but the ability to adapt production techniques to be even more precise, more flexible, and more efficient.

    But while machines are great for repetitive tasks, humans are smarter. And that’s why Tesla made a big investment in its workforce. They’ve employed some of the best technicians in the area to help build the Model S, and the final product proves that you can perfect the man/machine balance in a production facility.

Perhaps Robert Hunter said it best, 45 years ago:

Got to get down to the Cumberland mine
That's where I mainly spend my time
Make good money/five dollars a day
Made any more I might move away
Email ThisBlogThis!Share to XShare to FacebookShare to Pinterest
Posted in | No comments
Newer Post Older Post Home

0 comments:

Post a Comment

Subscribe to: Post Comments (Atom)

Popular Posts

  • Shelter
    I meant to post this as part of my article on Watership Down , but then totally forgot: Shelter In Shelter you experience the wild as a moth...
  • The Legend of 1900: a very short review
    Fifteen years late, we stumbled across The Legend of 1900 . I suspect that 1900 is the sort of movie that many people despise, and a few peo...
  • Rediscovering Watership Down
    As a child, I was a precocious and voracious reader. In my early teens, ravenous and impatient, I raced through Richard Adams's Watershi...
  • Must be a heck of a rainstorm in Donetsk
    During today's Euro 2012 match between Ukraine and France, the game was suspended due to weather conditions, which is a quite rare occur...
  • Beethoven and Jonathan Biss
    I'm really enjoying the latest Coursera class that I'm taking: Exploring Beethoven’s Piano Sonatas . This course takes an inside-out...
  • Starting today, the games count
    In honor of the occasion: The Autumn Wind is a pirate, Blustering in from sea, With a rollocking song, he sweeps along, Swaggering boisterou...
  • Parbuckling
    The enormous project to right and remove the remains of the Costa Concordia is now well underway. There's some nice reporting on the NP...
  • For your weekend reading
    I don't want you to be bored this weekend, so I thought I'd pass along some articles you might find interesting. If not, hopefully y...
  • Are some algorithms simply too hard to implement correctly?
    I recently got around to reading a rather old paper: McKusick and Ganger: Soft Updates: A Technique for Eliminating Most Synchronous Writes ...
  • Don't see me!
    When she was young, and she had done something she was embarrassed by or felt guilty about, my daughter would sometimes hold up her hand to ...

Blog Archive

  • ▼  2013 (165)
    • ►  September (14)
    • ►  August (19)
    • ▼  July (16)
      • Nosema Ceranae
      • The new retail life
      • Gran Torino: a very short review
      • Oooh! Bridge Porn!
      • Postcards from the land of commodity hardware
      • The curse of monetization
      • Do less to do more
      • Modern multiprocessor memory
      • Gearing up
      • Still not really happy with Feedly
      • What happened to MOL Comfort?
      • The Everest Brawl
      • Postcards from the TCP frontier
      • Perforce 2013.2 enters public beta testing
      • The Time Traveler's Guide to Medieval England: a v...
      • Sean Parker's do
    • ►  June (17)
    • ►  May (17)
    • ►  April (18)
    • ►  March (24)
    • ►  February (19)
    • ►  January (21)
  • ►  2012 (335)
    • ►  December (23)
    • ►  November (30)
    • ►  October (33)
    • ►  September (34)
    • ►  August (29)
    • ►  July (39)
    • ►  June (27)
    • ►  May (48)
    • ►  April (32)
    • ►  March (30)
    • ►  February (10)
Powered by Blogger.

About Me

Unknown
View my complete profile