The Japanese drone that forces overworked employees to go home by flying through offices and blaring out music
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23:10 2017-12-09

A drone that hovers over Japanese employees and blares out music to force them to go home has been created by an office security and cleaning firm.

The ‘T-Frend’ buzzes over those trying to work late, blasting out the notes of ‘Auld Lang Syne’, a Scottish tune used in Japan to announce that a store is closing.

The bizarre machine is an offshoot of the country’s efforts to reduce its notoriously long work hours.
But experts have branded the idea ‘silly’, claiming workers will simply take work home with them if they are forced to leave.

Taisei, a Nagoya-based office security and cleaning firm that co-developed the system, plans to start the T-Frend service in April in collaboration with drone system developer Blue Innovation.

‘You can’t really work when you think ‘it’s coming over any time now’ and hear ‘Auld Lang Syne’ along with the buzz,’ said Norihiro Kato, a director at Taisei, an office security and cleaning firm that co-developed the system.
The fee for the service is yet to be officially set but ‘the target price’ is around £3,350 ($4,500) a month, Mr Kato said.

Experts have been left unimpressed with the idea, branding it ‘silly’.

Scott North, professor of sociology at Osaka University, told BBC News: ‘Even if this robotic harassment gets workers to leave the office, they will take work home with them if they have unfinished assignments.’
He added: ‘To cut overtime hours, it is necessary to reduce workloads, either by reducing the time-wasting tasks and tournament-style competitions for which Japanese workplaces are notorious, or by hiring more workers.’

The drone is equipped with a camera, which stores footage on an SD card.
Office scenes can also be monitored almost in real time from a remote location.
The machine recognises its location on a building floor without GPS.

It takes off from its port, makes a surveillance flight on a pre-set path and then returns autonomously.
T-Frend’s developers are looking at giving the drone facial recognition technology to tell who is in the office after hours or whether there is an intruder.

Administrative officials at many companies push overtimers out of the door but this has ironically resulted in these officials working overtime themselves, to say nothing of ‘causing friction between employees’, the companies said in a statement.

Firms have therefore turned to security companies for this task, but they have struggled to provide enough staff given a nationwide labour shortage in Japan.

T-Frend therefore serves the twin function of reducing overtime and making up for this labour shortage, the firms claimed.

Japan’s government has been trying to change a culture in which working long hours is perceived as proof of loyalty and dedication.

Every year in Japan, long working hours are blamed for dozens of deaths due to strokes, heart attacks and suicides.
In February, the country launched the ‘Premium Friday’ programme, urging employees to knock off early on the last Friday of the month with the aim of both reducing work hours and invigorating spending.

But the plan fell flat with many claiming the last Friday of the month is one of their busiest days.

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