In my work setup I have 3 Monitors and 2 computers and a Logitech 850 Mouse
and Keyboard.  

For me to switch I have to move the Dongle.

Can anyone suggest a piece of gear I can put a pair of USB-A plugs onto a
switch box and have my dongle on the other side with
A button to switch back and forth?

-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU] On
Behalf Of Farley, Peter x23353
Sent: Friday, March 20, 2020 12:01 PM
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: OT: Mandatory Work From Home at my company

FWIW, my WFH setup for many years now includes an MS Natural keyboard and a
comfortable Logitech gaming mouse that I use a USB3 switch to change between
my small work laptop, large home desktop and medium-sized home laptop.
IOGear makes the USB3 switch, which can handle up to 4 inputs switched among
up to 4 CPU's.  My 27 inch Dell monitor has multiple HDMI and DisplayPort
inputs so I can switch the screen among all my machines.  Lots of cables of
course, but it has been well worth it.

The HumanScale office chair I bought long ago is comfortable too, not cheap
but the best investment in WFH comfort I ever made.

Radoslaw,

I don't know how other US companies do it, but mine has a telcom setup that
routes my work extension to my home land line as well as ringing in the
Cisco Jabber software on my company laptop, so I don't need a company cell
phone.  Don't want a company cell phone either, managers get them but
techies like me don't need them.  If I'm not online the Tech Support OPS
people know my home phone number and can call me there for production
issues.  If I'm not at home I am not easily reachable (not counting
vacations where I do take the work laptop along for emergencies), but my
manager has my personal cell number in case of a true emergency when I am
out of the house.  And being a true old fogey my cell is only turned on when
I am out of the house.  I use it strictly for phone calls and public transit
schedules, and sometimes texts to/from family.  No facebook, no twitter, no
games, don't need and don't want any of that.

Peter

-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List <IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU> On Behalf Of
Seymour J Metz
Sent: Friday, March 20, 2020 11:47 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: OT: Mandatory Work From Home at my company

No, you don't need a big PC with a comfortable keyboard and screen that
doesn't force continual scrolling, but it sure makes life more pleasant and
more productive. It never ceases to amaze me how people put up with terrible
human factors. Take the typical laptop keyboard - please!

--
Shmuel (Seymour J.) Metz
http://mason.gmu.edu/~smetz3

________________________________________
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU] on behalf of
R.S. [r.skoru...@bremultibank.com.pl]
Sent: Friday, March 20, 2020 10:51 AM
To: IBM-MAIN@LISTSERV.UA.EDU
Subject: Re: OT: Mandatory Work From Home at my company

W dniu 19.03.2020 o 18:30, Jousma, David pisze:
> We have been moved to Work from home for the foreseeable future.   We have
company provided laptop connecting via VPN, and softphone so my office
number rings wherever my laptop is connected.   Seems to be working out
pretty well.  It's the WEBEX server farm that seems to be having the growing
pains...

Just curious: In Poland and IMHO in Europe almost any office employee has
company cell phone. In my company it is mandatory. I don't know any person
form IT world (IBM, EMC, HDS, HP, local companies) without the cell phone.
For years.
What about US? I visited US many times and in the past I was amazed how
popular the pagers were, when we were using cell phones. From the other hand
I learnt that telco services in US are significantly cheaper than in Europe.

Note: we are using smartphones and many company application are available in
the phone. That allows me to start working early morning in bed. I don't
have to do it, but it is just convenient. It's not only answering emails,
but also accept requests (I'm manager), calendar schedule, password reset
tool, Skype (inside company, and external), address book, etc. Total it's
about 25 applications. Of course it's inside secure container and connected
via VPN.
As someone wrote, its' 2020, not 1950. However I say: it's 2020, not 2000.
You don't need big PC to do many things which you can do from the phone.

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