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In search of the neo-nomad

Laptop worker

More and more people work remotely

Is a new breed of wireless worker emerging? asks Bill Thompson.

I am, it seems, a neo-nomad. Or perhaps a digital bedouin, if you prefer something that makes the computing connection more obvious.

Writing in the San Francisco Chronicle recently reporter Dan Fost claims that a new generation of IT workers has grown up, people who turn a laptop, a wireless connection and a caf.© into an office and work wherever they happen to be.

Since he covers the Bay Area, just north of Silicon Valley, his focus is on website developers, programmers and of course entrepreneurs pushing their Web 2.0 startups. He distinguishes them from traditional freelancers because of their close engagement with technology and use of the latest generation of web-based tools in their working lives.

Yet the name would seem to apply just as well outside the hothouse atmosphere of San Francisco, and I think it should be extended to cover a broader range of workers than just the high-tech startups because it refers to an attitude and a way of organising daily life rather than to any specific technology.

As one of the millions of people who work wherever they happen to find themselves, relying on a laptop and a wireless connection for all their computing needs, I certainly live a nomadic lifestyle, pitching my virtual camp wherever I happen to find myself.

And I’d rather be a neo-nomad than a laptop warrior, a term which was clearly designed to make corporate executives feel that the evenings spent in dull business hotels in Utrecht preparing the monthly sales figures had some heroic aspect.

Nomads certainly have lots of places to settle for an hour or two of work.

Bill Thompson
The main advantages of independents are that the coffee is sometimes exceptionally good and the wireless is often provided free

One of my favourites is Brill on Exmouth Market in central London, partly because it is also a record store – it used to be Clerkenwell Records – but mostly because there is a bench outside that I can sit on to pick up my e-mail if I’m just passing on my way to nearby City University.

I reckon I’m in there often enough as a paying customer to get away with the occasional freeloading session, although customers who nurse a single latte for hours while they work away, chatting on Skype and spending no money, aren’t good for business. I try to pay my way wherever I’m sitting.

As usual with trend-spotting there is a massive temptation to introduce arbitrary distinctions and claim that they represent fundamental divisions between sub-groups.

Are the people who choose to work in a branch of Starbucks really more “corporate” than those who prefer independent cafes, for example?

Or does it just come down to which caf.© is nearest to home or which is cheapest? What about those who will use any space they can find that offers wireless access and space to sit?

The main advantages of independents are that the coffee is sometimes exceptionally good and the wireless is often provided free as a way of pulling in customers, but the large chains can be comforting in a strange city where the focus is on linking up with online friends and not sampling local colour.

Cafes aren’t the only option, of course.

There’s free wireless in the bar at the Arts Picturehouse here in Cambridge, but if you want to get away from either caffeine or alcohol then there is a growing number of shared workspaces offering people a chance to escape the isolation of the home office without the noise and pressure to buy coffee that you get in even the most welcoming caf.©.

But wherever you happen to be, it’s the pattern of working life that defines a nomad, with no office, colleagues who are largely engaged with online and often a number of overlapping projects to be juggled and managed at the same time.

The term neo-nomad has actually been around for a while. Researcher Yasmine Abbas calls her blog neo-nomad, and she has been writing about what she calls “digitally geared people on the move” since 2005.

Abbas is especially interested in how people who work on the move retain a sense of belonging to places and organisations, and at the way new technologies open up new ways of belonging to groups and even companies.

My good friend Simon runs an online recruitment company and it has operated as a hybrid business since it started.

There is a real office, and meetings take place there, but in general the team work remotely from wherever they happen to find themselves, whether that’s in Brighton, Suffolk or Australia.

It has been effective so far, and there was no way that the core team would all have moved to the same city or worked together in an office.

It may be a lot harder as they expand, though, simply because many of the online tools we currently use do not scale as well as an office floor in a well-designed system. Using instant messaging and project management tools is fine with five or 10 people, but a lot harder with 50 or a 100.

Neo-nomads and digital bedouins sound very exciting, but we mustn’t forget that this will only ever be a viable way of working for a small, skilled and privileged minority of people.

Most of us, most of the time, will work for organisations that require us to be in a certain place at a certain time in order to be a member of a team carrying out assigned tasks, including making and serving lattes in cafes.

It may be useful to look at the way the unwired among us work, and the patterns that emerge could be useful in developing working practices that are more humane and more productive, but we need to treat the neo nomads – and I include myself – as the digital equivalent of Formula One racing cars.

They are flashy, expensive and fast, and though they help develop new technologies nobody would suggest that we all drive one.

For one thing, there’s no space in an F1 car for a laptop, never mind the weekly shopping.


Bill Thompson is an independent journalist and regular commentator on the BBC World Service programme Digital Planet.

In search of the neo-nomad

Please find our new 2007 Office Furniture catalogue index below. Please click on the relevant link to download a PDF or contact us for your free 388 page old fashioned version. Call 0845 124 9955 or email sales@mipl.org.uk

Catalogue 2007-2008 / catalogue pages :

Selecta type of products :

index

index (349 Ko)
2 > 3

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Operator

Index
Index (291 Ko)
4 > 5
Functionnal furniture
Introduction (1551 Ko)
Adria 2 (2182 Ko)
Vegas evolution (2246 Ko)
6 > 7
8 > 17
18 > 27
Strategic furniture
Introduction (501 Ko)
4most (3978 Ko)
Perform’ (3101 Ko)
Impact (3104 Ko)
4ever (5461 Ko)
Performer (1417 Ko)
28 > 29
30 > 45
46 > 59
60 > 73
74 > 87
88 > 93
Complementary units
Hotline call centers (975 Ko)
Pedestals (1029 Ko)
94 > 97
98 > 101

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Work environement

Index
Index (291 Ko)
Desktop screen (559 Ko)
Accessory rails (506 Ko)
Screens (1165 Ko)
computer stands (1715 Ko)
Lighting (1600 Ko)
Office accessories (733 Ko)
Price guide (4787 Ko)
131 > 132
132 > 133
134 > 135
136 > 140
141 > 144
145 > 149
150 > 153
154 > 161

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Reception – meeting – Stacking

Index
Index (500 Ko)
162 > 163
Reception
reception units : Edison (780 Ko)
Metalic bench units (1953 Ko)
Hat and coat stands (840 Ko)
164 > 167
168 > 175
176 > 179
Meeting – stacking
Modular tables (3039 Ko)
chairs (2993 Ko)
Catering (902 Ko)
180 > 193
194 > 205
206 > 209
Price guide
Price guide (7865 Ko)
210 > 219

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Executive furniture

Index
Index (336 Ko)
220 > 221
Contemporary executive furniture
K.West (1965 Ko)
New City (1958 Ko)
222 > 231
232 > 237
Design
4ever manager (2654 Ko)
Surf (1293 Ko)
Exclusive (2481 Ko)
238 > 243
244 > 251
252 > 261
Wood veneer executive furniture
Times square (2258 Ko)
Noveo (2578 Ko)
Fascineo (1986 Ko)
Cambridge (2148 Ko)
262 > 271
272 > 279
280 > 287
288 > 295

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Chairs

Index
Index (343 Ko)
296 > 297
Office chairs
Index (522 Ko)
Budget (727 Ko)
Operator (1450 Ko)
The ergonomic choice (1817 Ko)
Specialist (748 Ko)
298 > 299
300 > 301
302 > 307
308 > 315
316
Executive chairs
index (748 Ko)
Budget (560 Ko)
Manager (2085 Ko)
Status (1037 Ko)
317
318
319 > 325
326 > 329
Price guide
Price guide (3055 Ko)
330 > 339

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Shade cards

Shade cards (1069 Ko)
340 > 343

New 2007 Office Furniture Catalogue

First day back today from our fact finding mission in deepest Brittany (France not Spears).  We stayed at a Gite owned and run by Phil and Naomi Curtis – http://www.gites-pontivy.com/

We have decided that this will be the centre of our search for property as soon as we have sold our home here in the UK. Thanks to Naomi we managed to get our daughter into the local school for a trial and she loved it, only complaining when it was time to collect her.

Over the four days we were there we travelled to various towns and areas to sample the local sights and food and enjoy the lack of stress required to drive around such a large country.

Over the next few days as I get back into the flow of everyday work I will bring this blog up to date.  Tomorrow I will be introducing our new 388 page office furniture catalogue so please call back.

Back from France