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A coaching tool (keyboard/mouse monitoring) provides audio and/or visual
alerts to the employee when he or she approaches a measured work intensity
threshold requiring a short micropause of a few seconds or a longer micro-break
of about a minute together with an ergonomic exercise to
encourage people to pace themselves while using a computer — a proven method to reduce fatigue and increase blood
circulation (U.S. Government NIOSH, Cornell University, UCONN and other
studies). |
There are 20
orthopedically designed exercises and stretches built into ErgoEnterprise.
They are designed to be followed in real time and last from 35 seconds to
one minute. These stretches and exercises may help relieve many of the common
symptoms you may have from using the computer without well-timed taking breaks
(see Stretching Exercises
Overview).
ErgoEnterprise Skins provide
organizations choices on how it's screens appear to users when
installed. This enables clients to determine the 'look and
feel' which they consider to fit best in their organization.
ErgoEnterprise is delivered with using either the ErgoEnterprise Formal Edition
skin or the ErgoEnterprise
Standard Edition skin. The training coaches delivered within
either skin of ErgoEnterprise can be either animated characters or actual videos of real people
performing stretching exercises.
Micro-breaks: The 'Micropause' and the 'Rest Break'
Pacing Tool Features (many items patented):
-
Micro-breaks
- Micropause alerts providing breaks of a few seconds
- Rest break alerts providing breaks of a minute or two
- Stretching alerts providing static loading relief breaks
-
Methodology
- Micro-breaks based upon 'activity as a function of time'
- Distinction between keying and mousing
- Senses activity pauses and resume-time after natural breaks
-
Personalization
- Easy setup and personalization with the Settings Wizard
- Options to 'ignore or enforce' micro-break alerts
- Options for visually-impaired users
-
User Interface, The
ErgoMeter™
- Unique biofeedback system
- Tray icon status indicator and menu
- Alert severity indicator (situational need for micro-break)
-
Stretching
Exercises
- Animation for casual or formal environments
- Live stretching coaches for exercises
- Optional audio narration with stretching exercises, with mute
-
Administration
- Dynamic usage restrictions option (from healthcare provider)
- Simple network administration
- Network reporting for analysis and healthcare providers
Quick Start
Lesson: It's as simple as 1, 2, 3!
(Reading Time: approx. 2 minutes)
1. After installation,
you'll notice the ErgoEnterprise icon (
)
on your Windows Taskbar in the System Tray:

2.
The icon (
) is a strain gauge
and works similar to your home stereo volume indicator. On your home
stereo, when the volume is low, the indicator bars appear green. When the
volume is increased, the bars start to become red. With ErgoEnterprise,
instead of having a bar for the left and right speaker volume,
there is an indicator for the keyboard on the left
and an indicator for the mouse on the right. An increase in
the number of red bars that are displayed indicates the increased need for
the user to take some brief micro-breaks.
There are only two main alert types which help the user take periodic short
breaks of a few seconds (micropauses) and well-timed longer breaks of a
minute or two (rest breaks):
Micropauses: Mouse or keyboard alerts (shown below) are the first
two types of alerts. These opportunities for taking a few seconds
away from your keying or mousing satisfy what Ergonomists call "Dynamic
Loading" which is the need for a brief micro-break (recovery period)
that builds dynamically, depending on the pattern of rest and keying or
mousing, during your time on the computer. This is an excellent time to
take a brief micro-break and stretch!
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Left
column displays the current keyboard alert level in red.
This is level 2. |
 |
Right column
displays the current mouse alert level in red.
This is level 4. |
Rest Breaks: StretchTimer alerts (shown below) are the third type of alerts.
These opportunities for taking a minute or two away from your computer
activity satisfy what Ergonomists call "Static Loading" which is the
need for a brief micro-break (recovery period) that builds simply from your
sitting in one place over an extended period of time without getting up.
The default period of sitting at the computer without stopping, for the
StretchTimer, is 30 minutes. If no activity is detected for a full two
minutes, the StretchTimer will reset itself to start a new 30 minute period.

The
StretchTimer (
) is your signal
that, based on your recent pattern of work and rest, this is an excellent
time to simply get up and stretch!