Going back to Agilent's origins at HP, AFAIK, only Hewlett and Packard ever had traditional "offices" with walls to the ceiling and doors. Their offices are preserved in the condition they were in when H & P left the company. Employees can visit these offices, which are like a museum.
In practice, what executives do to is have a conference room reserved at all times as a virtual office and use that as an office if they want to have a private meeting. If you are familiar with Star Trek's Captain Picard, these work like his "ready room". I spend most of my time in my lab, which is in an RF shielded room, so it's almost like I have an office :-) Rick Karlquist N6RK HP 1979-1999 Daun Yeagley wrote: > Actually, amazing that it might seem, even high level managers (like a > division manager) at Agilent only have cubicles. (usually they are a bit > larger and fancier than the "regulars", but finding a real office is > extremely rare. > > Daun > _______________________________________________ time-nuts mailing list -- [email protected] To unsubscribe, go to https://www.febo.com/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/time-nuts and follow the instructions there.
