@imjustinschmidt: Clown Prank on OMEGLE Pt.4😭😈 @tc_reekie

Justin Schmidt
Justin Schmidt
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Region: US
Wednesday 09 December 2020 18:28:23 GMT
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realspillhooos
Josh :
These are to good 😂
2020-12-09 18:32:05
676
bobsiu
._xyz. :
chyba halloween pomylił mu się z mikołajkiem
2020-12-15 16:36:10
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BBC’s 1979 Vision of the Work-From-Home Future Was Shockingly Accurate Back in 1979, the BBC offered a bold prediction: that the future of work would shift away from the traditional office and into our homes. In a televised segment, they introduced viewers to a concept called the “workstation,” a fully self-contained setup that could operate from anywhere — as long as there was a telephone line and an electrical outlet. The imagined home office included a visual display unit, an electronic keyboard, a printer, and a personal card system that would log your arrival and identity — a surprising precursor to modern-day logins and digital IDs. It even registered your work hours, foreshadowing today’s time-tracking software and flex-time schedules. The segment also touched on concepts we now take for granted: digital messages waiting for you when you log in, combining text with images, sending files globally, and printing documents on demand. Even tasks like booking a Concorde flight to New York and paying with a credit card — all from the same terminal — were part of this imagined future. Before logging off, the presenter even checks her electronic diary to confirm travel dates and business details, highlighting a seamless integration of scheduling, communication, and commerce. While some elements may seem quaint now, the core of the BBC’s vision was strikingly on point. Their version of the home office wasn’t just a technological prediction — it was a glimpse into the lifestyle shift we’re living today. #TikTokFilmTVCompetition
BBC’s 1979 Vision of the Work-From-Home Future Was Shockingly Accurate Back in 1979, the BBC offered a bold prediction: that the future of work would shift away from the traditional office and into our homes. In a televised segment, they introduced viewers to a concept called the “workstation,” a fully self-contained setup that could operate from anywhere — as long as there was a telephone line and an electrical outlet. The imagined home office included a visual display unit, an electronic keyboard, a printer, and a personal card system that would log your arrival and identity — a surprising precursor to modern-day logins and digital IDs. It even registered your work hours, foreshadowing today’s time-tracking software and flex-time schedules. The segment also touched on concepts we now take for granted: digital messages waiting for you when you log in, combining text with images, sending files globally, and printing documents on demand. Even tasks like booking a Concorde flight to New York and paying with a credit card — all from the same terminal — were part of this imagined future. Before logging off, the presenter even checks her electronic diary to confirm travel dates and business details, highlighting a seamless integration of scheduling, communication, and commerce. While some elements may seem quaint now, the core of the BBC’s vision was strikingly on point. Their version of the home office wasn’t just a technological prediction — it was a glimpse into the lifestyle shift we’re living today. #TikTokFilmTVCompetition

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