Archive for January 30, 2012

Servicing Sophisticated Tastes with Office Vending Machines

The humble office vending machine has come a long way from the days when you were lucky if it dispensed chocolate bars and potato chips in addition to tea and coffee. The bigger offices no longer find it adequate to invest in an office coffee machine. This is because clock-watching is frowned upon in corporate culture. So if the personnel need to be in office for extended hours, they certainly need more than just their routine cups of tea and coffee.

The proliferation of office coffee machines occurred when savvy managers/employers began to realize that installing an office coffee machine actually saved time and money for both the company and the employees. The company saved money in terms of salary for an office peon who prepared and then served beverages to the staff. The personnel benefitted by getting tea and coffee when they wanted rather than having to depend on the whimsy of some peon. So an office which boasted of its own office coffee machine was perceived as having a sugar daddy management.

Changes came with the spread of the 24×7 culture. When employees need to work in different shifts to embrace globalization, then the most critical of physical needs – food and beverages – naturally began to occupy center stage in the office planning process. The office vending machine began to upstage the office coffee machine. While some office vending machines still dispense only traditional crisps, pizzas, sodas and sandwiches; in offices where the management realizes the importance of healthy staff, office vending machines stock fruit smoothies, fresh fruit slices/servings, yogurt, juices, homemade granola bars, along with confectioneries and biscuits.

Manufacturers have contributed to this revolution by offering more and more sophisticated office vending machines. You can choose how many kinds of products can be dispensed by the all helix glass front merchandiser. These come in sleek designs which add to the slick look of the office and can vend a wide variety of sizes of bag and confectionary lines.

Author Bio

Kenco vending offer coffee vending machine, office coffee machine, snacks vending machine and drinks vending machine on best price.

Meal & rest break violations in the healthcare industry

Q: I work as a nurse in a hospital three days a week doing 12-hour shifts per day. We are allowed a 30 minute unpaid lunch break every day. I usually take my lunch at the hospital cafeteria. However, while clocked out for lunch, I am supposed to have my cell phone with me. Usually, while I’m eating, I would take the call of any hospital personnel calling regarding work. These calls would take anywhere from 10 to 20 minutes. Once the call is done, I would finish eating and go back to work. Because of these calls, I feel that I am still working even though I was technically clocked out for lunch and had actually eaten. Am I entitled to additional wages?
A: Under California law, you are entitled to a 30-minute uninterrupted meal period. During the meal period, you should be relieved of all duties. If you are able to eat but are also simultaneously addressing work-related issues, then you have not been provided an uninterrupted meal period.
If the meal break is not provided as required by law, the employer shall pay the employee one additional hour of pay at the employee’s regular rate for each workday that the meal break is missed. The employer who violates the meal break rule may also be liable for penalties.
Additionally, 12-hour employees in the healthcare industry are entitled to a second 30-minute meal period. They may voluntarily waive their right to one of their two meal periods. However, in order to be valid, any such waiver or agreement must be in writing and voluntarily signed by both the employee and the employer.
The employee shall be fully compensated for all working time, including any on-the-job meal period, while such a waiver is in effect. Because the law requires a mutual agreement, an employer cannot require an employee to waive the right to a meal period.
The law on meal breaks may significantly affect the employee’s right to overtime. If the employer fails to provide a meal break to an employee who works 12 hours per day, the missed 30 minutes is added as time worked. Hence, the employee may be entitled to additional overtime pay if the employee’s shift has now extended to 12 hours and 30 minutes. Any work beyond 12 hours per day by nonexempt employees must be paid at the overtime rate of twice the employee’s regular rate (or double time).
Employees who work 12 hours per day are also entitled to at least three 10-minute rest breaks. Unlike the meal breaks, the time allotted for rest breaks is counted as minutes or hours worked. If the employee missed any of these rest breaks, she or he is entitled to an additional one hour pay at the regular rate.
As we have previously discussed, if an employee misses both a meal break and a rest break, the employee becomes entitled to an additional two hours of pay at the employee’s regular hourly rate. For a nurse working a 12-hour shift who did not waive, and was not provided, a second meal break, and was not provided a third rest break, he or she would be entitled to two additional hours of pay.
For example, if the nurse earns an hourly rate of $35 per hour, the nurse will become entitled to an additional $70 per day that a meal and a rest break were not provided. A 12-hour duty nurse who has worked for four years for the same employer and regularly missed meal and rest periods two days in a week may potentially be owed $28,000 in unpaid wages for missed meal and rest breaks. In this economy, that is not loose change.
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Understanding Security Templates

A security template is a physical representation of a CompTIA Certification security configuration, a single file where a group of security settings is stored. Security templates are inactive until imported into a GPO or the Security Configuration And Analysis console. Locating all security settings in one place streamlines security administration. You can use security templates to define the following security settings in a GPO: Account Policies Local Policies Event Log Restricted Groups Registry File System You cannot use security templates to define the IP Security, Public Key, Software Restriction, and Wireless Network security settings in a GPO. Each security template is saved as a text-based .inf file. This enables you to copy, paste, or import some or all of the template attributes. You can import (apply) a security tem?plate file to a local or nonlocal GPO. All computer or user accounts in the site, domain, or OU to which the GPO is applied receive the security template settings. Importing a security template to a GPO eases domain administration by configuring security for multiple computers at once. Default Security Settings Updated for Domain Controllers Template (DC security.inf) This template is used when promoting a computer from a member server to a domain controller. It reflects the default security settings for file, registry, and system services. Exercise 1: Creating a Security Templates Console In this exercise, you create a new Security Templates 220-602 console, the main tool for man-aging security templates. To create a Security Templates console Use the procedure provided earlier in this lesson to create a new Security Templates console. Name the console Security Templates. The console should appear on the Administrative Tools menu. Exercise 2: Customizing a Predefined Security Template In this exercise, you customize a predefined security template by saving the predefined template as a new template (to preserve the original predefined template) and then making edits to security settings to create a new template. To customize a predefined security template 1.Use the procedure provided earlier in this lesson to customize the Securedc.inf template. Save the Securedc.inf template as a template called New Template with the description New domain controller template. 2.In New Template, in Security Settings/Account Policies/Password Policy, change the Minimum Password Length to be at least 10 220-702 Exam.Save New Template.