It's almost certainly here to stay.
Within days or perhaps even hours into the Covid-19 lockdowns around the world, newly at-home workersânot to mention students and family membersâ discovered a common affliction of our remote age: Zoom fatigue. [Itâs real]( and itâs [relentless](.
But millions of us would be rather lost by now without our videoconferencing tools, which allow us to stay close to each other, while also peering into the fascinating lives of our colleagues. Once a clunky technology without enough payoff, videoconferencing so quickly became an essential part of the way we live and work that itâs unlikely to go anywhere anytime soon.
Turn on your cameras and donât forget to mute. Itâs time to connect.
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[Quartz Weekly Obsession]
Videoconferencing
June 17, 2020
Sorry, you go ahead
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Within days or perhaps even hours into the Covid-19 lockdowns around the world, newly at-home workersânot to mention students and family membersâ discovered a common affliction of our remote age: Zoom fatigue. [Itâs real]( and itâs [relentless](.
But millions of us would be rather lost by now without our videoconferencing tools, which allow us to stay close to each other, while also peering into the fascinating lives of our colleagues. Once a clunky technology without enough payoff, videoconferencing so quickly became an essential part of the way we live and work that itâs unlikely to go anywhere anytime soon.
Turn on your cameras and donât forget to mute. Itâs time to connect.
ð¦ [Tweet this!](
ð [View this email on the web](
By the digits
[$100:]( What the first consumer webcam, the QuickCam, cost when it debuted in 1994 ($175 in todayâs dollars)
[$3.2 billion:]( Amount Cisco paid in 2007 to acquire videoconference-equipment maker WebEx ($3.96 billion in todayâs dollars)
[8:]( Number of times Zoom Videoâs China-born founder, Eric Yuan, was denied a US visa to work in the technology sector
[$61.9 billion:]( Zoomâs market capitalization as of June 15, 2020
[50:]( Maximum number of users who can join a group video chat on Facebookâs new Messenger Rooms feature
[15,000:]( Number of customers subscribed to BlueJeans, the videoconferencing service acquired by Verizon in May 2020 for a reported $400 million
[50 million:]( The number of downloads of Houseparty, the videoconferencing app owned by Fortnite maker Epic Games, over 30 days from mid-March to mid-April
Quotable
âOur bodies process so much context, so much information, in encounters, that meeting on video is being a weird kind of blindfolded. We sense too little and canât imagine enough.â
â[Gianpiero Petriglieri, management professor at INSEAD](
Sponsored by Workplace from Facebook
When WFH, a quick 'hi' goes a long way
---------------------------------------------------------------
Whether you're desperate to get back to the office or still enjoying the view from your couch, these best practices will help you stay connected to your colleagues even while youâre working apart.[Follow these seven tips for remote success](
Million-dollar question
Why are we so tired of videoconferencing?
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When Covid-19 hit, Darren Chait expected to see a big decline in meetings registered on Hugo, the connected meeting notes software company he co-founded. After all, [he noted]( â[a]s business slows down, as sales pipelines dry up, and as in-person meetings are canceled, itâs only logical that people would be having fewer meetings for the foreseeable future.â
Wrong. Workers in lockdown were having just as many meetings as before. Their canceled external meetings had simply been replaced by internal meetingsâwith more frequent town halls and touch-bases meant to keep colleagues connected during a distinctly disorienting time.
But working together doesnât have to mean meeting together, as Chait reminds us. At the very least, it doesnât have to mean seeing one another. Just like the meeting in the conference room that could have been an email, your colleagues can easily get worn out by video meetings that could have been a phone call.
Video is great when reading people is important or when the purpose of your call is fostering connection. But if youâre just going over deadlines with a direct report or kicking around ideas for a project with a colleague, consider an old-fashioned voice call, at least once in awhile.
Brief history
[1878:]( George du Maurier publishes a cartoon in Punch magazine of the âtelephonoscope,â a fictional invention from Thomas Edison that transmits images along with sound.
[1964:]( Bell Labs debuts the Picturephone, which requires that both parties make advance reservations, travel to one of the nationâs few designated Picturephone booths, and remain motionless for the duration of the call.
[1993:]( The first âwebcamâ makes its public debut; itâs used to monitor a coffee pot at the University of Cambridge.
[2006:]( Skype (short for âsky peer to peerâ) adds videoconferencing.
[2010:]( FaceTime emerges from an Apple gaming social network.
[2019:]( Zoom prices its IPO at $36 a share. The stock, er, zoomed up 72% upon its market debut, and on June 15, 2020, it ended the trading day at $239.02.
[2020:]( Zoom admits it censored video calls at the request of Chinese regulators, who flagged their concerns with online commemorations of the anniversary of the Tiananmen Square crackdown. (The censored meetings involved users in China, where people are banned from holding vigils or referring to the massacre online.)
[??:]( Hologram meetings take over, thanks to virtual reality headsets.
Fun fact!
George du Maurierâs fictional telephonoscope, [according to David Goran at The Vintage News]( included âLong paper funnels to the ends of which were connected flexible tubes for insertion into the listenerâs ears.â Add an unobtrusive microphone somewhere, maybe throw in some Bluetooth functionality, and thatâs not too far from our current reality.
Have a friend who would enjoy our Obsession with Videoconferencing?
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[Forward link to a friend](mailto:?subject=Thought you'd enjoy.&body=Read this Quartz Weekly Obsession email â to the email â
Watch this!
Working with what you have
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Videoconferencing isnât just for workâjust about everything in our lives moved to a Brady-Bunch type format in record speed. When NBCâs late-night comedy show Saturday Night Live announced it would be coming to your living room from their living rooms, viewers were intrigued.
But did it work? The second âAt Homeâ episode may have been a little more organized, but [fewer people tuned in](. Take a gander at the first attempt, starting with the monologue from host and Covid-19 âcelebrity canary in a coal mineâ Tom Hanks.
Giphy
Pop quiz
Zoom? Old news. Some companies are moving meetings to which video game:
Call of Duty: Modern WarfareAnimal Crossing: New HorizonsHalo 2: AnniversaryRed Dead Redemption 2
Correct. Sitting around a campfire, drinking coffee, and dealing with a possible marauding posse...just like in an office.
Incorrect. Not quite yet, although surely itâs only a matter of time.
If your inbox doesnât support this quiz, find the solution at bottom of email.
take me down this ð° hole!
It is entirely possible to hold a good remote meeting. In this [Quartz at Work (from home) workshop]( a panel of experts will help you to avoid common pitfalls, present authentically, and increase everyoneâs engagement on screen.
Does your Zoom fatigue extend to work-from-home fatigue?
---------------------------------------------------------------
Or maybe youâve leaned way in and canât imagine a life of commuting in real pants anymore. Weâve put together a lot of resources to help Quartz members get their minds around what work will look like in the near future.
- [Will hastily reconfigured offices be safe?](
- [Will fancy perks still exist?](
- [Whatâs up with elevator tickets?](
- [Whoâs even going to want to go back to an office?](
⦠Not sure if your future involves a Quartz membership? [Try one for free for a week]( then see what Future You thinks.â¦
Reuters/Fabrizio Bensch
Poll
What breach of videoconferencing etiquette are you most likely to forgive?
[Click here to vote](
Interruptions by petsGuest appearances by kidsEating on cameraConsistent failure to mute
ð¬ let's talk!
In last weekâs poll about [tear gas]( 70% of you said you thought it should be banned from civilian use. âï¸ Logan wrote in to say, âI take huge issue with how you described George Floydâs murder. He did not asphyxiate in police custody, he was held down while an officer kneeled on his neck for over 8 minutes, he was murdered by police.â
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Todayâs email was written by [Heather Landy]( and edited and produced by [Liz Webber]( and [Susan Howson](.
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The correct answer to the quiz is Red Dead Redemption 2.
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