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Businesses Technology

Businesses Are Using VR To Learn How To Best Fire People (latimes.com) 36

McGruber shares a report: Today, the dream of goggle-wearing masses has deflated, and investment in the tech has dwindled. But VR companies like Talespin have found a growing market in simulating the least entertaining content imaginable: our jobs. Consumers may not yet feel the pull of visiting fantasy worlds in their free time, but for businesses that need to train their workers, better tools are a necessity, not a luxury. "What you're seeing today is not an evolution but a return to the application that's always worked," said Jeremy Bailenson, the director of Stanford's Virtual Human Interaction Lab and one of the founders of Strivr, a competing virtual reality training start-up. He traces the roots of virtual reality back to the Link trainer, a mock airplane fuselage mounted on a platform that could simulate real flying sensations, which half a million military pilots used to safely train during World War II.

Talespin found its first major client in Farmers Insurance Group, which needed a new way to train claims adjusters for home inspections. The start-up designed a virtual house, complete with cluttered closets and leaky sinks, that trainees could scour for evidence of water damage. The simulation changed slightly each time, letting new hires rack up months' worth of experience in just a few days. The company has grown to 75 employees to match the demand for VR training coming from Farmers and other large corporate clients, fueled only by $5.6 million in outside investment. But the company always uses Barry's termination as a demo for new clients -- it's a compelling proof-of-concept experience designed, Jackson said, "to see if talking to a virtual human can actually make you uncomfortable. It's proved to be pretty effective." That emotional realism is what separates virtual reality from all the other tools for teaching interpersonal skills in the workplace, from pamphlets and role-playing workshops to interactive tutorials.

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Businesses Are Using VR To Learn How To Best Fire People

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  • I've been made redundant three times, a couple of couple of those times in a mass layoff, first after the .com bubble burst and the second time during the mortgage crisis. The single most crappy way of doing it was in 2008 when I was taken out of the middle of a development session and sent to a shitty 4 person conference room and confronted by some poor little 22 year old girl whom the HR chief hand sent to do the firing because he was too much of a slime sucking coward to do it himself. I should have been
    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      The best firing is Office Space style whereby they just stopped sending paychecks to the target employee. If the employee complained, they were sent around in cycles of red tape and delay tactics.

      I actually worked for a startup that ran out of money and stopped paying people. An email basically said, "Paychecks will be late, as we are unfortunately short of revenue this month."

      People slowly faded away as they found new gigs. It was during the dot-com bust such that people didn't have a lot of choice and som

      • During the dot-com bust days, we didn't know on which day we'd get paid, or if there would be enough money to pay everyone. Each time when we found out that there was money in the account we'd all race to our cars, drive to the bank, where the company was doing business, as quickly as possible, and cash the check. Some poor guys decided to cash their checks at their local banks, only to have the checks bounce a few days later.

    • I"ve been made redundant three times

      You're not doing it right - you haven't even lived until you've deliberately pushed the limits at a bullshit job... just to see what it takes to get the sheep to blink. ;)

      • by Ambvai ( 1106941 )

        One of my friends in IT did that. He pushed his salary from about 110k to over 300k over the span of four years before he gave up and voluntarily quit, dropping down to about 180k, but a much better work environment.

    • I know a (software/consulting services) salesman who went to a company Christmas dinner, and, after dinner, the CEO made a few remarks, essentially: "All of you seated on the left side of the room are fired".

      This really happened, I have talked to corroborating witnesses.
    • I've never been made redundant, I always seem to run my contracts out to the end or jump to a new, usually more lucrative position.

      I'm currently a direct employee (O the shame) but it's so easy and pays well enough that I may just ride it allllllll the way to shore.

      Unless something better (read: MO' MONEY MO' MONEY) comes along and then I'll ride that one all the way to shore.

    • I kind of liked the way the Matt Damon was fired in the movie Elysium, the quote was, "You have received a lethal dose of radiation. You have 5 days to live. Thank you for your service."
  • Perhaps firings should be handled Mr. Spacely style. https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
  • TFA: Another fail. This time, the screen advised me to "be careful with comments that can be misconstrued as ageism."

    I bet IBM wished they had this system. [slashdot.org]

  • ... believe that leaving was their idea.

    How one goes about this will vary greatly from person to person, and has risks of running afoul of facing a constructive dismissal lawsuit if it is applicable in your jurisdiction.

    And of course, it's not instantaneous. You will likely need to plan ahead for this by several weeks if not months. It may be easier to simply give them a good severance package and tell them that their services are no longer needed.

    • I found two good ways to terminate the employment of villagers in Minecraft. You can either lock them in a house and pour a bucket of lava in through the window, or lock them out of the village at night and let the zombies take care of them.

  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    George Clooney's character flew around the country firing people in person. The suits wanted to save money by firing people over VTC. That didn't end well.

  • Is it too much to ask these days for people to use words instead of ambiguous abbreviations?

    Alexa, fire the Slashdot editors right away.

  • You just wave some twinkies at the employees you want to fire to get their attention then toss the twinkies into the parking lot and lock the doors when the minions you are firing chase the twinkies outside.

  • // include any 20-something hired within last 6 months expressly for purpose of being part of this RIF
    If ((emp.age > 48 || emp.cannon_fodder) && len(emp.path_to_ceo) > 4) {
    emp.terminate();
    }
  • Bye Bye Barry. Don't let the door hit you on the way out, and say hi to your wife for me. We're supposed to go away for that weekend you have your golf tournament.
  • HR:We're sorry, but your position has been made redundant, and we have to let you go.

    Working shlub:That's terrible!

    HR:As a token of our thanks for all your hard work over the years, here is a free VR headset.

    Yaz

  • by JustAnotherOldGuy ( 4145623 ) on Tuesday August 27, 2019 @07:35PM (#59131562) Journal

    Pretty soon they WILL fire you by VR to avoid disgruntled employees shooting the HR Manager (or whoever got tasked with firing "Crazy Jim" down in the warehouse).

    You'll be shown into a room with two doors.

    You'll sit at the table, a monitor will light up and Karen from HR will tell you that you're history.

    The other door opens onto the parking lot and the one you came in through will be locked.

    Your personal trinkets and shit will be waiting for you in a cardboard box outside the door.

    O Brave New World!

  • Once you learn how to fire the VR stooge without getting him angry, you're ready to go. March right out of there and use your new skills to fire a real person. What could possibly go wrong? Wait, real people don't react like VR people?

    If you're a good manager, you care about your people. You do what it takes to get to know your people for who they are. Firing someone, even for poor performance, is excruciating. But if you have to do it, you are much better off if you've already been treating them with digni

  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • They play a*hole and excecutioner because they think it makes there job safer and when they're finished, they get fired too.
    So you got fired *and* you have no more former friendly collegues. Must suck.

    I feel the same for those behind the desks at the office of labor when picking up my unemployment benefits for a gap month.
    Mind you, this is Germany, where to don't lose everything right away when you're fired due to mandatory federal unemployment insurance, so YMMV.

  • Today, the dream of goggle-wearing masses has deflated, and investment in the tech has dwindled.

    What kind of a lead in is that to an article about VR? VR use has been doubling every year since the launch of the first Oculus headset and shows no sign of deviating from exponential growth. Steam has just got onboard with it's own top of the line headset, freshly launched. Oculus and Microsoft have continued to invest and develop Inside-Out tracking from the HMD both throwing some series R&D into predictive algorithms to make the experience smooth. Oculus only launched a completely standalone headset

  • This time, I tried to pick the prompts that read like corporate boilerplate -- polite, optimistic and ultimately unsympathetic.

    First the small talk, then I told Barry he had said one too many inappropriate things.

    He dug in deeper. "This is about what happened with Kaitlin, isn't it? In my opinion, what she was wearing was inappropriate in a meeting with a client. All I did was point that out."

    Be the robot, I thought. "Policy is policy, and you've crossed a line."

    Jesus Christ on a cracker. This isn't

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