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Lifting The Lid On Computer Filth 567

IainMH writes "There's a story over at BBC News about how work stations contain nearly 400 times as many microbes than lavatories. Gross. 'A desk is capable of supporting 10 million bacteria and the average office contains 20,961 germs per square inch, according to research. ... By contrast, the average toilet seat contains 49 germs per square inch, the survey showed.'"
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Lifting The Lid On Computer Filth

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  • Hmmm.... (Score:5, Informative)

    by luxis ( 240935 ) * on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:47PM (#8574993)
    Old news? Workstations 'Dirtier Than Toilets' [slashdot.org] /. article Mon May 13, '02 02:43 PM.

    Same story at CNN [cnn.com]

    At least... if you're working at your workstation its 'your' bacterias and not some others ass/shit/piss? ;-)
    • Re:Hmmm.... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Helios1182 ( 629010 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:50PM (#8575025)
      Just remember that its 'your' bacteria plus the bacteria off of everything you touched before using your workstation. Grab a cup of coffee? Open a door? Use the office toliet? Its all your hand, and thusly your workstation.
      • Re:Hmmm.... (Score:5, Interesting)

        by nounderscores ( 246517 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:04PM (#8575148)
        The main concern with the bacteria that live in your colon is that they break down the things that you find indigestible (cellulose, left over protein etc) and produce toxic byproducts. These toxic byproducts are the dangerous things and have to be expelled regularly. They are only safe because once they leave your body, you generally don't eat them up again. The workstation bacteria are probably mostly air bacteria that have found a nice area full of skin flakes and cookie crumbs to breed on. nothing to worry about.

        Now if you combined the food rich environment of your keyboard with the poison producing bacteria from your colon, you start to have a real problem.
    • Re:Hmmm.... (Score:3, Funny)

      by SoSueMe ( 263478 )
      With all the crap that comes across my desk, I'd bet that it could be significantly higher than in the article.
    • Re:Hmmm.... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by MikeDawg ( 721537 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:49PM (#8575478) Homepage Journal

      PC World [pcworld.com] also notes on this subject. Fellowes is announcing that they are going to begin injecting a product called "Microban" into their keyboards and mice, to create an environment where bacteria cannot survive and grow.

      • Re:Hmmm.... (Score:5, Funny)

        by noidentity ( 188756 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @11:11PM (#8575613)
        "...a product called "Microban" into their keyboards and mice, to create an environment where bacteria cannot survive and grow."

        Darn it! I knew there was a use for that old Russian monitor that glowed even when it was unplugged. Curse modern low-emissions monitors!
      • Re:Hmmm.... (Score:5, Funny)

        by thinkliberty ( 593776 ) on Tuesday March 16, 2004 @12:06AM (#8575919)
        Is the licking of microban safe? Because sometimes I read something funny and coffee squirts out my nose so I have to lick my keyboard.
  • Surprising? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Bl33d4merican ( 723119 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:49PM (#8575009)
    I guess we shouldn't be surprised. Most of us sneeze on our hands, not our asses.
    • by Professor_Quail ( 610443 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:52PM (#8575041) Homepage
      speak for yourself!
    • Re:Surprising? (Score:3, Interesting)

      by PacoTaco ( 577292 )
      I've always wondered why people sneeze into their hands. I think it's better to sneeze toward the ground and away from other people. Sneezing into your hands just covers them with germs, and it's not like you're going to catch them all anyway.
      • Re:Surprising? (Score:3, Informative)

        by afidel ( 530433 )
        It's to get most of the atomized snot to recolese on your hand instead of hanging in the air for others to inhale into their lungs. Since the bronchial passage is the main way foreign pathogens enter a healthy persons system this makes sense.
    • Re:Surprising? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Johnno74 ( 252399 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:19PM (#8575283)
      I was in a lecture one day and our lecturer said:

      "There are about 10^13 cells in the human body. There are also about 10^14 bacteria living in and on the average human body.

      That means each one of the cells in your body is outnumbered by bacteria 10-1.

      Now, turn around in your seat and look at the person next to you, and think about just what you are looking at..."


      (I checked the figures here [wikipedia.org])
      • by Trejkaz ( 615352 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @11:14PM (#8575637) Homepage
        You just made sex feel so much less appealing.
      • Biomass? (Score:5, Informative)

        by gotr00t ( 563828 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @11:48PM (#8575830) Journal
        As prokaryotes, bacteria are much smaller than your eukaryotic cells(think proton to electron... orders of magnitude smaller). They add about 3 pounds to your weight, which is nothing, considering the average person weighs... what, like 130 pounds?

        So, your cells still constitute the majority of your body's biomass.

      • Re:Surprising? (Score:4, Insightful)

        by Corpus_Callosum ( 617295 ) on Tuesday March 16, 2004 @12:15AM (#8575956) Homepage
        "There are about 10^13 cells in the human body. There are also about 10^14 bacteria living in and on the average human body. ... That means each one of the cells in your body is outnumbered by bacteria 10-1. ... Now, turn around in your seat and look at the person next to you, and think about just what you are looking at..."

        This shouldn't bother you anymore than the fact that a city contains stonework and metalwork. Fact is, our bodies are great civilizations of living things. Our cells, containing our DNA, is certainly central to the system that emerges as "us". But the symbiosis with other little living things is, in fact, crucial to our continued and happy existance.

        In answer to the implied question raised, "think about just what you are looking at...", I must say that for me, I guess I would have to admit to seeing a great collection of living things that through simple ignorance was bestowed with the illusion that it is singular...
        • Further (Score:4, Informative)

          by AllenChristopher ( 679129 ) on Tuesday March 16, 2004 @07:17AM (#8577050)
          Yes.... since it is impossible for a human being to survive without many of these bacteria, the question of what is "part of your body" is subtle.

          It goes futher than symbiotic bacterial cells with their own genetic futures. Mitochondria may have originated as separate organisms that evolved to exist symbiotically inside a larger cell... mitochondrial DNA is separate from nuclear DNA. [brown.edu] Mitochondria cannot be produced by cells de novo.

          It would be foolish to say that only the parts of a cell which are created by genomic DNA are human. Our animal cells cannot function without mitochondria.

          The bacteria are not the stonework or metalwork of our bodies' cities, though. A closer metaphor would be that a country is a body made up of humans as cells, and that the animals which support each person are the bacteria that outnumber the cells. America is a country made up of people, not cows.... but it survives by consuming dozens of cows per person every year. Rats eat our garbage.... that is, intestinal bacteria eat our digestive waste. Etc.

          A body without bacteria is no more desirable than a country without non-human animals. It's beyond silly.

  • Get over it! (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Qetu ( 732155 ) <adolfo.nieto@gmail.com> on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:50PM (#8575019)
    We are surrounded and inhabited by living beings. It is good for you ...
    • Iron Gut (Score:4, Interesting)

      by Saeed al-Sahaf ( 665390 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:10PM (#8575200) Homepage
      We are surrounded and inhabited by living beings. It is good for you ...

      This is true. I lived in Asia for a few years, ate some of the most discusting things on the planet out of street stalls (usually I was really drunk), now, nothing bothers my iron gut, as I have quite the worldly bacteria living in there, takes care of just about everything.

  • by prozac79 ( 651102 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:50PM (#8575021)
    Does this mean I have to stop using the top of my computer as a food tray? It was so convinient to be able to place a plate and glass on top of the case while I'm working.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:50PM (#8575023)
    Of course they're filthier! Toilets just have people sitting on them. There's no end to the fetishes explored on personal workstations across the globe!
  • Ho hum. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:50PM (#8575026)
    Of course computers have more germs per square inch than a toilet seat. How often do you clean your computer? How often do you clean your toilet seat?

    I guarantee you, if you cleaned your toilet as often as you clean your computer, it would (a) be utterly filthy, and (b) reek like nothing you've ever experienced before.

  • by PopCulture ( 536272 ) <PopCulture@@@hotmail...com> on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:51PM (#8575033)
    the "lick test"

    lick a public toilet seat you'll probably get real sick

    lick your desk and your work mates will just think you're a freak.
    • by JabberWokky ( 19442 ) <slashdot.com@timewarp.org> on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:02PM (#8575142) Homepage Journal
      I doubt it... the toilet seat probably has a variety of common surface bacteria such as staph plus yeast and maybe a bit of coliform; only the last is likely to make you sick (you get exposed to the first two all the time). Butts are pretty clean; you keep them covered in fabric after you wash them. Hands and mouths on the other... err... hand...

      The desk has people respirating over it and sneezing in the area. Everybody is going out, touching various things, tossing out bad stuff from the office fridge and then borrowing a stapler. It's likely got a significantly wider range of bacteria and viruses that can cause infection in a human.

      --
      Evan "And the worst thing out there are buffets, especially the salad bars"

  • by Trolling4Dollars ( 627073 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:51PM (#8575036) Journal
    ...telephone sanitisers.
  • Old news (Score:5, Insightful)

    by MisterFancypants ( 615129 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:51PM (#8575037)
    Not only is this old news (I remember hearing about how keyboards are more germy than toilets years and years ago), but its also not even that surprising if you stop to think about it, as the average toilet is disinfected quite regularly while the average workstation/keyboard is almost never even subjected to a basic dusting or wash, let alone a disinfectant.
  • by Tremor (APi) ( 678603 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:52PM (#8575040) Homepage Journal
    Yeah, it's gross, but not at all surprising... I work in a cube farm where it's pretty much common knowledge that touching any of the equipment is going to be worse bacteria-wise than doing pushups on the mensroom floor (one of the stranger things I've seen in my cube farm days). And when you consider that equipment is shared between people on different shifts, and how strongly people are discouraged from calling in sick when they're sick, you start to get a very good picture of the kind of biological warfare taking place in the cracks between the keys. You can pick up more germs in this office by typing "WMD" than you would pick up from being attacked with one.

    And don't even get me started on the transmission of scabies in shared upholstered swiveling office chairs...
    • by Trumpetgod2k1 ( 740425 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:01PM (#8575130) Journal
      I'll seccond that. I'm in a college dorm, and as the local computer guru, I get called upon all the time to fix "broken" machines and install hardware (hey, easy money). I ran into one computer that someone inherited from a friend who recently graduated. The power supply was on the blink and the machine would only turn on "when it wanted to." Opening the case showed the horrible truth: All the once PCB green cards and motherboard were covered in gray fur. There was a good five years of dorm room dust coating every surface, not to mention several moths I pulled from behind the bezel. I had to take the whole think outside with an air duster to get anywhere near the power supply. I didnt actually open the PS once I had it out, but the cloud of dust that arrose when I dropped it in the dumpster told me all I needed to know.

      Moral of the story? Keep it clean!
      • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:07PM (#8575171)
        User: My keyboard doesn't work.

        Me: Ok I'll go check it out.

        Me (later): Ok, keyboard keys are sticky... and there is no software problem... and there are a lot of porn sites in the browser cache........

        Me resigns.
    • by Malc ( 1751 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:04PM (#8575153)
      You're right. I'd never seen people with many warts on their hands (yes, I felt I had to qualify that ;)) until I worked at my first job. In fact, I'd hardly ever seen warts in my life. In that one company of about 20 people at least 5 people had 5 or more warts on their hands. Unsurprisingly I got my first wart within a year. Very virulent and took a long time to get rid of them. Before my immune system finally kicked in I had more than 30... and now I have few scars from the N2 treatment that was applied to some of them. I blame keyboards for this (and sharing them). Filthy things. Spreaders of disease!
  • by Tom7 ( 102298 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:54PM (#8575060) Homepage Journal
    Yeah, but the germs on my desk come from my hands and nose, not other people's asses.
  • by Killswitch1968 ( 735908 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:54PM (#8575063)
    Seriously. All manner of filth just accumulates just below the keys.
    I'd like to know why no one has come up with a decent, washable keyboard. Most of the ones on the market are way too expensive are just too impratical. Are there some engineering problems with the design? Outside of the whole water-and-electricity-don't-mix thing I mean.
    • by LinuxHam ( 52232 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:11PM (#8575208) Homepage Journal
      My father-in-law recently told me a great story about this. His current customer wanted the onsite tech to swap out some 100 keyboards because they were in disgusting shape. Instead of putting the company through all the harassment of replacing the keyboards for free, he decided to try having the cafeteria steam clean the keyboards.

      He tasked a couple of box monkeys with splitting the keyboards open and pulling the keyboard assemblies out, separating them from the electronics. The cafeteria ran them through the high pressure steam cleaning dishwasher system, and they came out looking and working like new! Strange but true.
    • by Zardoz44 ( 687730 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:13PM (#8575230) Homepage
      Why don't you unplug it and soak it in a bucket of soapy water? When it dries off, you use it again.

      Go here [webtechgeek.com] for some fun tips.

      If there's electricity in the water when you clean it, then you forgot to unplug it, and your computer is too close to water anyway.

  • by xenotrout ( 680453 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:55PM (#8575068) Homepage Journal
    Everything is dirtier than a toilet! It's really that simple. Everyone should start making things out of toilets.
    1) Find everything to be dirtier than toilets
    2) Make things out of toilets
    3) Profit!
    There's no missing step! Well, except that these things will not actually be toilets, and thus will be found dirtier than toilets. But why? Because people know that toilets are "dirty", and thus clean them! So many things are assumed to be clean because they are not specifically used in a way that would seem to make them dirty, and so they don't get cleaned. No story here, move along.
  • by UpLateDrinkingCoffee ( 605179 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:55PM (#8575076)
    I have a small spare bedroom I recently updated as a home office. Part of my renovations were to install pergo-like flooring and basically get rid of any surfaces that can catch dust like carpet and fabrics since my computers seem to get so dirty. It hasn't helped at all.

    One thought that occurred to me was to get an air purifier... one that circulates air with a HEPA filter. Does anyone use one of these in their computer rooms and does it actually make a difference as far as dust goes? They also have ones with UV lightbulbs, maybe this would cut down on the microbe populations? I'm more concerned with the constant accumulation of dust than anything else.

    • 20" box fan, 20" square hypoallergenic furnace air filter, duct tape.

      It works for my allergies, at least. Lasts a couple months. You should see the filter when it's done...very nasty dark shade of gray. I did notice less dust overall.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      I go two words for you...

      Ionic Breeze

      Yes they're expensive. Yes they work.

      You get a "deal" if you buy two of them so find a bacteriophobe geek friend to split the order.
    • by Sycraft-fu ( 314770 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @11:03PM (#8575575)
      Provided you have a room where other entrances are reasonably blocked or dealt with and you keep the air flowing. Heck, at work the clean room is a room with lots of HEPA filters. Basically you have an outer room, with all the doors qith at least one other door before the outside, and good seals. All the air is filtered comming in here, not sure how well. There are also stick pads to get dirt off your shoes.

      The inner room, the actual clean room, then just maintains itself through positive air flow. There are a couple layers of filters that take out basically all particles. The bottom of the walls are open so that the air can continually flow out.

      Well this works REALLY well (well enough to work on micro processors in there). There's basically no dust in the outer room, never mind the clean room.

      So if you want to use it in your home, you'll need to make sure that your doors/windows are reasonably well sealed and stay closed. It'll do you no good if a big entrance for dust is open all the time. You also need to keep the air flowing, since some dust WILL get in and it's only getting out via the airflow. Just having it run with your AC probably won't do a ton. You'll probably need continous airflow.

      But ya, they work great if you give them an environment to work in. You won't get cleanroom conditions in your house, of course, but you can pretty effectivly eliminate dust, at least in a single room.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:56PM (#8575081)
    Pinkeye (3 times)
    Ringworm (once)
    two sinus infections (suspected)

    and

    the herp...

    Well, not from the keyboard, from the skank I was emailing, but I'd like to think it counts....

    • by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:27PM (#8575353)
      Up here in the Great White North [dartmouth.edu] we had a bit of a pinkeye outbreak a few years ago. There was a particularly virulent strain that made its way onto campus, and spread like crazy via all the public computer keyboards. Word on the street was that between half and two-thirds of the campus might have had pinkeye that winter. The CDC even sent some people up to study it. Just goes to show what a few dirty keyboards can do.
  • Code Smells (Score:3, Funny)

    by SlowMovingTarget ( 550823 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:57PM (#8575095) Homepage

    This explains why the XP technique of using Code Smells [c2.com] is so effective. "This code smells like crap!"

  • by digitalFX ( 682678 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:59PM (#8575104)
    I sometimes use my wireless laptop while I'm IN the lavatory. I think this means I'll probably die earlier than most of you.
  • by Geurilla ( 759701 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:59PM (#8575113)
    What the article doesn't report is that according to the same study, the average toilet seat contains 47% more urine per square inch than the average workstation.
  • by iswm ( 727826 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @09:59PM (#8575115) Homepage
    Really, when you think of your computer area, you don't think of bacteria as you would when you think about a bathroom, so you're less inclined to clean it to the extent you would a bathroom. But either way, pretty much everything else is as equally as bacteria ridden. It's like the test they did on Myth Busters [discovery.com] where they tested to see if a tooth brush left by the toilet would really pick up fecal matter, and they found out that tooth brushes all over the building had the same amount of fecal matter on them after a month of use.
  • And? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by IHateUniqueNicks ( 577298 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:01PM (#8575133)
    I never have understood this obsession of counting the number of small living creatures around us. Now, count what behaviors/locations are more likely to make us actually sick, and you've got my interest, but it's pretty rare I see a study that actually says something along the lines of "cleaning with anti-bacterials will reduce the likelyhood of you getting sick" (in fact, I've only seen ones that show no difference).

    The human body has evolved to be pretty capable of protecting against the things around us people now call "gross", and the rarer diseases that we come in contact with generally aren't stopped by staying "clean" anyhow.
    • Re:And? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by techno-vampire ( 666512 ) on Tuesday March 16, 2004 @01:06AM (#8576123) Homepage
      I never have understood this obsession of counting the number of small living creatures around us.

      The idea is that first you count all the microbes in an area, then you claim that all of them are germs. This way you spread FUD about health and get people to waste money on anti-bacterial this, that and the other thing. Germs are microbes, but not all microbes are germs.

  • by MajorDick ( 735308 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:08PM (#8575179)
    Back when the P266 were just hitting the market I sprung and bought a dual MB all the stuff to build a system a whopping 256 meg of ram an adaptec 3940uw, all the hot harware of the day I just finished putting it all together and loaded it when I knocked my BIGGIE Coke from wendys onto the floor, well the case was off, and it all shot inside the system, I reached for the plug pulled it and went and sat down on the couch thinking about the 2k I had just blown. Well I decided to see what was salvagable so I took it all apart and rinsed it in the bathtub (seriously) and let it dry for about 5 days just to make sure. I put it all together and VOILA It worked fine. About 6 months later it started acting real odd, I assumed it was contacts had corrodd after the coke then water bath, I took the case of , it was unreal, EVERY cat and dog hair in the house had stuck to everything , and it smelled, I cant even imagine how many germs were in there, who the hell needs an Ionic Breeze I got a coke covered P266
    • I did this on purpose to a 486SX-20. We wanted to find out if the motherboard could run while submerged in antifreeze. The answer is no -- antifreeze apparently has a low impedance at multi-MHz frequencies. We put the motherboard in the sink and rinsed the antifreeze off with tap water -- not even distilled water. Then we blow-dried it for about 30 minutes, and plugged in back in, without antifreeze that time. Still worked. And we discovered that antifreeze cleans a motherboard extremely well :-)
  • by superpulpsicle ( 533373 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:11PM (#8575207)
    The dirtiest part of the computer is really windows. That's where millions of virus exist.
  • pathogenic? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by jtilak ( 596402 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:17PM (#8575265) Journal
    And how many of those germs are pathogenic? Isn't that what matters? Sorry for not RTFA, but it seems people have become obsessed with germs lately. And articles like this while interesting and true, manage to create paranoia with ignorant people. Also, the kinds of germs that live on toilet seats are a little different than the kinds that live on or in your keyboard, unless strange people regularly pull their pants down and sit on your keyboard.
  • by pair-a-noyd ( 594371 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:22PM (#8575298)
    so filthy I that I don't want to touch them without a radiation suit and tongs..

    Really though, the FIRST thing that any computer I service gets is CLEANED.

    The keyboard is the most disgusting thing of all, people eating, drinking, picking their noses, scratching their privates, you name it. The keyboard is a petri dish.

    I mix 50/50 antiseptic mouthwash and 91% rubbing alcohol in a spray bottle and mist the keyboard, then scrub it with a nylon scrub brush. I have an air compressor with an aardvark nozzle that I blow the keyboard out with. The keyboard looks 100% new (unless it turned yellow from a SMOKER) and it 100 times cleaner that it came in as.

    I open the PC and blow all the crap out, including the drives and fans. If the owner is a SMOKER, then the job is extra nasty and takes more aggressive cleaning. Cleanest computers come from elderly, upper class people, filthiest computers come from poor people who usually have lower hygiene standards and more likely to SMOKE than the upper class folks.

    Also, computers on the floor in a carpeted room get clogged up with carpet dust no matter how clean the habits are of the owner, carpet disintegrates as it wears out and the fibers that break off (as dust) get sucked into the running PC fans..

  • by countach ( 534280 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:23PM (#8575314)
    Maybe we all better work in the toilet.
  • Well duh. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Vellmont ( 569020 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:32PM (#8575385) Homepage
    Toilet seats are flat and non-porous. They're easy to clean and there's nowhere for bits of food to go. The reputation for toilet seats being "dirty" is rather unfounded unless someone shits or pisses all over them. And while urine is disgusting and I don't want to sit in it, it's actually almost always sterile.

    Bacteria usually need food to multiply on. People don't tend to eat in bathrooms, but they do eat at a desk. Keyboards are filled with places for dust, food, moisture, etc to collect. Great places for bacteria to multiply. Keyboards are also very hard to clean, and almost impossible to clean well because of all the spaces inside them.

    What upsets me most though is the comparison to toilet seats that winds up in every "thing X has this many germs/inch article". In understanding anything context and perspective is king. The implications is that if something is dirtier than a toilet seat, it just MUST be dirty as hell. It's a rare article that points out that maybe the premise (toilet seats are really dirty) is at fault. I'd be more interested in comparisons to things that ARE dirty, like a cutting board after having cut raw meat on it. Unfortunately articles like these always end up as the "interesting little tidbit" articles in newspapers where they have to grab your attention and don't have time for things like giving out real information.
  • own bacteria (Score:3, Interesting)

    by man_ls ( 248470 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:38PM (#8575422)
    You'll have to remember that primarely, computers are used by one person and one person alone--same with the immediate workspace around them.

    If they are your own bacteria you're used to, they're no more harmful than.....anything else, because you've got a natural immunity to them from *living with them.*

    An interesting finding definately, but not a dangerous one at all.
  • by Sandman1971 ( 516283 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:47PM (#8575464) Homepage Journal
    Don't use your hands on washroom doorhandles, seriously. I can't remember the source, but I did read an article a few years ago that stated when tested, 90% of bathroom door handles in public buildings had feces on them.

    Makes you wonder how it gets there in the first place.
  • by B.D.Mills ( 18626 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @10:53PM (#8575498)
    Office equipment should be regularly disinfected to prevent the spread of bacteria responsible for colds and flu.

    I can see it now. There will be more calls to harrassed tech support people from clueless morons who have read the article, and then "disinfected" their computers by washing them off in buckets of disinfectant.
  • by NotQuiteReal ( 608241 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @11:04PM (#8575577) Journal
    You are in a restaurant. Your "garden salad" contains a little [5mm] "inch-worm" type creature walking around on it, deftly avoiding the 1000 Island dressing. Do you:

    a) scream and run out of the restaurant.
    b) pick the bug off and continue eating.
    c) calmly point out the problem to the waitperson and ask for another salad.
    d) get all in a huff and sue the restaurant, the waiter, and the food vender.

    This situation has happened to me twice. The first time, my answer was "b". The second time (years later) my answer was "c" (I think the bug was uglier than the little inch-worm thingy).

    I suppose you could offer "e) ignore the worm and eat the salad. The worm can look out for itself." But that's just a little bit too far for me.

    There is stuff everywhere. Get over it.

  • by spun ( 1352 ) <loverevolutionar ... Nom minus author> on Monday March 15, 2004 @11:28PM (#8575731) Journal
    With my tongue. Is that bad?
  • Tips For Geeks (Score:3, Informative)

    by $criptah ( 467422 ) on Monday March 15, 2004 @11:28PM (#8575733) Homepage

    Hey there, my friends and I have come to the same result in our biology class when we grew bacteria that we have swiped from different surfaces. Things like keyboards and mice were nightmares compared to toilet lids. However, this is not the ned and here is what you can do.

    First of all get anti-bacterial gel to wipe your hands after you use a bathroom. Secondly, buy some anti-bacterial wipes and wipe your keyboard every morning. These items are small enough to store in your office and cheap enough to buy on a regular basis. Also, I have noticed that a lot of my friends liked to sneeze and then go straight for the keyboard. It did not really bother me until they started doing it while using my box; that's when I put a box of wipes right next to my monitor. Most of my friends still sneeze, but instead of wiping their hands on my keyboard, they do it on a wipe. Putting a box of wipes on your table is a polite way of saying "please use that if you sneeze."

    I have to admit that my gf's brother still has zero understanding when it comes to personal hygine (or lack thereof). When it comes to his case, I tell him to "wipe his fucking hands off!" Works like a charm.

  • Suggestions... (Score:3, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday March 15, 2004 @11:32PM (#8575755)
    Here's what I use to keep my computers clean:

    1) Shop Vac -- $20 from WalMart for a 1x1 (1HP x 1Gallon) container.
    2) Isopropyl alcohol -- 50c or so for a pint
    3) Baby Wipes -- about $4.00 for a box - unscented
    4) Glass cleaner -- $1 at the Dollar Store
    5) Scouring Powder -- 50c at WalMart

    The ShopVac is perfect for the dust bunnies and stuff inside the system unit. Be careful around fans as the suction can spin them much faster than the typical case fans are rated for. Some of these vacs are reversible to blow air.

    Isopropyl alcohol is great for cleaning mice. I tend to just throw away the keyboards since they're so cheap and so tedious to clean. If you do need to clean them I recommend actually removing the keys and dumping them into some soapy water. Rinse. Then set them to dry on a towel. A hair dryer can help dry up residual moisture. Alcohol is also good for some types of sticky residue from stickers and tape.

    Baby wipes are convenient in a lot of places. I use them for the system unit and general wipedown. They work just as well as the Computer Wipes but are about 1/10 the cost. They are damp so don't use them inside the case.

    Glass cleaner is good for body grime. Make sure it has ammonia (most do). Be careful when using it near Scouring Powder that contains chlorine bleach.

    Scouring powder is a last resort for marker stains on plastic housings. It will scratch a little, but can help get out tougher permanent marker.

    Other useful things include a toothbrush, eraser pencil, air can, Qtips, and cotton buds.
  • PC's at Hospitals (Score:4, Interesting)

    by doorman ( 61472 ) * on Tuesday March 16, 2004 @01:21AM (#8576174) Homepage
    I used to service PC's in a hospital, and they were a mess. Systems in the sterile areas, the compromised immunity area especially, you had to bag and remove before you could open them up. Dust carries some dangerous stuff, and in the compromised immunity wing you couldn't even move a ceiling tile or change a light fixture without removing the patent. The first time a nurse saw the inside of a PC from that ward, she remarked "That pretty much could have killed the patient who shared the room with the computer".

    At a different hospital I was at for a short time, no such policies for removing systems exist. Scary.
  • The first sentence:

    "The vast majority of bactera on Earth are harmless."
  • *sigh* (Score:4, Informative)

    by Niet3sche ( 534663 ) on Tuesday March 16, 2004 @04:44AM (#8576675)
    So UofA got a publication hit and a corresponding fat grant (likely) this time.

    Wonderful.

    I've stopped really caring to hear, every 1.5-2 years, about the shocking and revolutionary study that -gasp!- places that get daily use sans daily cleaning are actually dirtier than places that are - given their function - cleaned nightly.

    However, there is a quote and its bretheren that never cease to amaze me:

    The study found that where office workers who were told to clean their desks with disinfecting wipes, bacterial levels were reduced by 99%.

    Hmm ... let's take a look at this ...

    1. Disinfecting wipes can take out bacteria. Woohoo. We know this.

    2. People are being encouraged to live in a germ-free world - and we'll suffer because of it.

    I believe we're headed straight for another Black Plague, given our disposition towards feeling the need to scrub and kill every last germ off our surfaces. This is silly, and is in fact making us weaker as a whole, as we now have zero exposure to elements that, 50 years ago, we came into daily or near-daily contact with.

    A few-point plan to save us from ourselves:

    a. If you go to the bathroom, wash your damn hands after you're finished. And this does not just mean rinsing them under cool water - this means the full soap and warm-hot water treatement.

    b. We're not Howard Hughes. Let a few germs go; they'll likely do us all a lot more good than bad. Yeah, they're all over your skin, clothes, and so on ... but to want to rid yourself of 'em is tantamount to saying that we ought to rip out our eyelashes - because there're symbiotic crawlies living in there, and that gives me the willies.

    c. The only people that antibacterial soap ought to be dispensed to are nurses and the like. Antibacterial products are the result of an over-indulgent Western imagination rising up with our xenophobia with a desire to remain King or Queen of our Domain.

    Anyway ... that's what I think. ;) Please wash your hands after going to the bathroom ... other people have to touch that door too, you know!

  • by DynaSoar ( 714234 ) * on Tuesday March 16, 2004 @07:47AM (#8577159) Journal
    ... Dr. Charles Gerba and the BBC science news staff eating their lunches off of toilet seats.

    Number of germs and bacteria is not nearly as relevant as which ones. Of course you're going to get a bunch of rhinovirus on desks and keyboards. People breathe. But on toilet seats you're going to get E. coli. In the right place, inside your intestines, they're just dandy. Eat some, and you're in for a world of hurt.

    Of course the germs were there. They've always been there. A reasonably healthy person carries just as many and spreads them around, and is not suddenly susceptible to something just because someone counted them.

    The article was ridiculous, sensationalistic, half-science, and I blame BBC far more for that than Dr. Gerba. They've been leaning this way for years now. They making more factual errors, and not correcting them, but worse, they're writing it more like tabloids.

The Wright Bothers weren't the first to fly. They were just the first not to crash.

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