Close X
Sunday, December 1, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

This paperless office runs on wind energy, apps

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Dec, 2014 11:32 AM
    In a move to ensure environmental sustainability, a futuristic office is here where the energy is supplied by wind farms, bosses drive electric vehicles and employees use apps, digital signatures, and toilet sans paper rolls.
     
    Based in Noordwijk, a town in the west of the Netherlands, the headquarters of the technology firm Decos has gone entirely paperless.
     
    While the minutes for meetings are taken using Decos' own Minute app, contracts are signed using e-signatures and documents are never printed.
     
    Business cards are banned and any post is returned as Decos demands only digital communication, Daily Mail reported.
     
    The building has slanting walls. According to the company, it does not need cabinets. Employees work at flex-stations in open office gardens with glass partitions.
     
    Energy for the building is supplied using a nearby wind turbine park.
     
    All new company cars are either electric or hybrid.
     
    "Shower" toilets in the office are fitted with an integrated nozzle in the basin of a traditional-looking toilet.
     
    The nozzle extends and sprays warm water. A dryer function is then used to remove the water.
     
    Decos is not aiming to develop robots and machine learning products to help other firms go paperless, the report added.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    People with larger pupil size bad decision makers

    People with larger pupil size bad decision makers
    Once the relevant information was presented, a larger pupil size indicated poorer upcoming task performance owing to more variability in the decisions made....

    People with larger pupil size bad decision makers

    Marriage queries annoy single Indian women most

    Marriage queries annoy single Indian women most
    When are you getting married and why aren't you getting married? are questions that annoy single Indian women most, according to a survey by personalised...

    Marriage queries annoy single Indian women most

    Parrots show how to be committed in relationship

    Parrots show how to be committed in relationship
    Humans have learnt a great deal about complex social behaviour from other species. It's time now for the avians to teach us a few lessons....

    Parrots show how to be committed in relationship

    Babies master words differently as they grow

    Babies master words differently as they grow
    These findings may help parents enhance their children's vocabularies and assist speech-language professionals in developing and refining interventions...

    Babies master words differently as they grow

    Fear of loss drives entrepreneurs

    Fear of loss drives entrepreneurs
    Loss aversion or fear of losing one's salary at a full-time job, along with its prestige is what drives most entrepreneurs and not a love of risk....

    Fear of loss drives entrepreneurs

    Male peacock doesn't sacrifice much to woo his lady

    Male peacock doesn't sacrifice much to woo his lady
    The magnificent plumage of the peacock may not be quite the sacrifice for love that it appears to be, researchers at the University of Leeds have found....

    Male peacock doesn't sacrifice much to woo his lady