So, is it like a factory floor open for direct public engagement, so people can come do some work, unqualified, just by visiting it...? Would one get special coins or tickets for work, that one could spend on the coffee shop and supermarket? Or, is it something different?
How would this actually work with varying number of people coming to visit it, and varying work skills? Would these be web-based, or local physical works? How would such place be managed to function properly?
So, is it like a factory floor open for direct public engagement, so people can come do some work, unqualified, just by visiting it...? Would one get special coins or tickets for work, that one could spend on the coffee shop and supermarket? Or, is it something different? There would be payments at the end of your shift or at the end of the week if that's cheaper. You'd think exchanging money would be cheap!
Yes! These jobs don't require much training. Making a coffee for someone is easy. Stacking shelves is easy but hard work.
It would be local physical work. There would be people, deliberately not called managers who would provide guidance and simple training.
// open for direct public engagement, so people can come do some work, unqualified, just by visiting it...?
I like the low barrier of entry in this idea. It reminds me cooperatives (all members share profit) and community gardens (come to work anytime, with no money earned though, just for community bonding).
I guess people would want to do the work without prior training, but would it be enough work for all who want it? Say a coffee shop needs 5 people to serve coffee, then what do other 50 people work as? And what if 10 people want to work at the same time?
Overall, this idea seems to be about people's freedom to create jobs for themselves when they feel like working. So I wonder, what other work could be imagined in such local economies? I think adding a layer of meaning would make this idea stronger. What do people in local communities need? Based on needs various spaces with various jobs could be created. Say, local communities decide they want more beautiful spaces to enjoy nature in their neighbourhoods, so they design gardens and do the planting together, or restablish wilderness parks, or create makerspaces to play with the tools, marketplaces to sell what they make, and so on.
A question comes here on how would people locally self-organise to work on creating these spaces together? So that they could work in these spaces when they feel like it after.
You could have a website where people register their interest to work on a certain day and then random number people are picked. That's for the case there being 50 people wanting to work but only 5 spaces.
It might have to be just in time scheduling so it's always the day before that the schedule gets set. It might be inconvenient. You've got a lot of people chasing a few jobs.
Could have nailbars, landscaping services, bars, restaurants.
それで、それは直接の公の関与のために開いている工場の床のようであり、人々はそれを訪れるだけで資格のない仕事をすることができます...?コーヒーショップやスーパーマーケットで使える特別なコインや仕事のチケットを手に入れるでしょうか?それとも、何か違うのですか?
これは、実際にそれを訪れるさまざまな数の人々、およびさまざまな作業スキルでどのように機能しますか?これらはウェブベースですか、それともローカルの物理的な作品ですか?そのような場所が適切に機能するようにどのように管理されますか?
So, is it like a factory floor open for direct public engagement, so people can come do some work, unqualified, just by visiting it...? Would one get special coins or tickets for work, that one could spend on the coffee shop and supermarket? Or, is it something different?
How would this actually work with varying number of people coming to visit it, and varying work skills? Would these be web-based, or local physical works? How would such place be managed to function properly?
はい!これらの仕事は多くの訓練を必要としません。誰かのためにコーヒーを作るのは簡単です。棚の積み重ねは簡単ですが、大変な作業です。
それは地元の物理的な仕事でしょう。指導や簡単なトレーニングを提供する、意図的にマネージャーとは呼ばれない人々がいるでしょう。
民主的に管理できるのかしら。
Yes! These jobs don't require much training. Making a coffee for someone is easy. Stacking shelves is easy but hard work.
It would be local physical work. There would be people, deliberately not called managers who would provide guidance and simple training.
I wonder if it could be democratically managed.
// はい!これらの仕事は多くの訓練を必要としません。誰かのためにコーヒーを作るのは簡単です。棚の積み重ねは簡単ですが、大変な作業です。
これがどこに向かっているのかわかります。基地を開くのが好きですか?私は何の拠点が必要になることを知っています、HiveCells仕事とピクニックのために到着します。
// Yes! These jobs don't require much training. Making a coffee for someone is easy. Stacking shelves is easy but hard work.
I see where this is going. Like opening a base? I know what we'll need bases for, there's a fleet of HiveCells that'll arrive for work and a picknick.
// open for direct public engagement, so people can come do some work, unqualified, just by visiting it...?
I like the low barrier of entry in this idea. It reminds me cooperatives (all members share profit) and community gardens (come to work anytime, with no money earned though, just for community bonding).
I guess people would want to do the work without prior training, but would it be enough work for all who want it? Say a coffee shop needs 5 people to serve coffee, then what do other 50 people work as? And what if 10 people want to work at the same time?
Overall, this idea seems to be about people's freedom to create jobs for themselves when they feel like working. So I wonder, what other work could be imagined in such local economies? I think adding a layer of meaning would make this idea stronger. What do people in local communities need? Based on needs various spaces with various jobs could be created. Say, local communities decide they want more beautiful spaces to enjoy nature in their neighbourhoods, so they design gardens and do the planting together, or restablish wilderness parks, or create makerspaces to play with the tools, marketplaces to sell what they make, and so on.
A question comes here on how would people locally self-organise to work on creating these spaces together? So that they could work in these spaces when they feel like it after.
You could have a website where people register their interest to work on a certain day and then random number people are picked. That's for the case there being 50 people wanting to work but only 5 spaces.
It might have to be just in time scheduling so it's always the day before that the schedule gets set. It might be inconvenient. You've got a lot of people chasing a few jobs.
Could have nailbars, landscaping services, bars, restaurants.