"Unpredictable high-energy environment" indeed.?ÿ Looks suspiciously like a gov't. agency office.?ÿ And dual monitors to boot....
Which means it's supervisor's cube that has no need whatsoever for dual monitors.?ÿ The production personnel only get single monitors.?ÿ 😉
@jitterboogie Now I've got monitor envy.
Don't. I have income and job advancement growth envy, I think I'm going insane some days.
Look at the new industrial cutting edge architecture. Exposed piping, high quality LED lighting. Paradise in the basement.?ÿ

Push the survivability aspect..
Note the cube is adjacent to the bomb shelter in event of disaster.
@paden-cash so true!
@thebionicman Must be willing to work in a fast-paced downrange kinetic energy environment
I don't know what the rules are up there but down here a bedroom must satisfy some minimum dimensions, and must have a window.
a bedroom must satisfy some minimum dimensions
Does it have a cardboard bed?

@dougie?ÿ
Remember the London Olympics, where the number of prophylactics issued/used was something like 25 per athlete per day, and mid way through the "games" they ran out and had to ship in from France, in an Antonov?
Yes, wish I was there...
Must be willing to work in a fast-paced downrange kinetic energy environment
"fast-paced", "high energy", "moving target", "delivery oriented"
=
"we are terrible at contracting, scheduling, planning, and managing our projects, and you as the employee will pay for it, until you quit in disgust and we reel in another sucker"
If the air-conditioner works, it would have been a great place to be today. 97 feels like 109 at 6:00 p.m. with a gusty 2 mph breeze.
Having read this post this morning, FB read what I've been reading and has issued me with this:
After Hurricane Ike hit, my Houston apartment building was without power for two weeks.
Our office building never lost power, but it was almost surrounded by large downed trees and power lines. There was a wide variation in power restoration across the city, and we didn't lose our phone lines, but most of us didn't let on about it...and muted our desk phones.
I rode my bicycle to work, around the obstructions, for about a week. It was cool, it was quiet, there were no phone calls, the 3-4 of us who could get to work were far happier, and I'm pretty sure I did a month's worth of work in that week, before we had to return to normal.