Canon PowerShot S90
ƒ/2
6 mm
1/30
200

Walking by thousands of tiny employee lockers, I had to ask.

The workforce is driven in to start work at 5:30pm (to serve the U.S. time zones), and they store their phones, purses, wallets and all personal items in the lockers, even pencils.

Why? At various times, they will be taking credit cards by phone. With no mechanism to record these numbers, they would have to memorize them to be able to walk out with them.

11 responses to “Call Center Lockers”

  1. Waiting for the night shift… One of many rooms on many floors…
    iYogi call center

  2. I wonder how do you keep a sense of self (uniqueness) amidst these overcrowded societies…

  3. I hope one day automation and education render this mass tedium obsolete.

  4. agree with PoE. Not shocked by the lockers, though. As much as I waver on it, limiting distractions keeps the work-flow up.

  5. I talk to these guys all the time…so much that I I think they know me.And all my passwords,etc.
    Life of a Luddite.

  6. Wonder what will happen with these jobs when robots take over… outsourcing 4.0….

  7. @ Gisela: you maintain uniqueness by imagining you live in a world before machines ‘improved our lives’ so much, and forget you work in a ‘digital veal pen’ as one movie put it.
    @ Pieces: yes, that education and tedium in the US has been replaced with the tedium of looking for fewer and fewer jobs since they’ve been moved somewhere cheaper to preserve ‘profits’.
    @ solerena: you become one of the unique millions looking for a the diminishing number of jobs available for people.

    Automation is wonderful… if you own the companies that buy the machines that replace those expensive humans!

  8. Hmmm….A bit harsh….

    But as a Luddite, one of my core feelings is that "modernization" is doing just that….and the winner is the low bidder.
    If we still used horses we would need folks to breed them,build barns,saddles.
    Even recycle the waste…
    Less traffic accidents and more time to look around.No ABS etc…(!)
    Silly example maybe….
    But I can’t help thinking a bit along these lines…

  9. Yes and the sardonic humor reflects the harsh reality of the millions of Americans who’s jobs have been eliminated slowly but surely, outsourced to maintain the profits of the very few at the expense of the middle class which can no longer help build America’s wealth. With the continuing outsourcing of higher and higher level jobs, its a sad reality going forward, which is ignored by all but those who mainly use their computers to find work now. 1/6th of America’s workforce is out of work with no hope of returning to a standard of living they once knew. Tax breaks for corporations which create jobs overseas instead, means maintaining profit for the wealthy and the end of profit, and even paying taxes to the US, for the middle class, who’s wages haven’t changed in 25 years…if they are still earning wages.

    This is not recognized by the top 20% in the US who make over $85k a year and still live in the, now ‘bubble’ of wealth that used to be twice as big. 20% of 100M American workers represents 0.0033 % of the world. If you’re in that group, recognize your good fortune! 60% of Americans make less than 40k.

    http://www.nytimes.com/2011/03/18/opinion/18krugman.html

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