If a work-from-home employee had their desktop Slack app open - say, for example, to the Direct Message channel with Slackbot (opens in a new tab) - then the above contraption should keep their Slack bubble green for up to 30 minutes after the train stops moving. "We created a device that seems to always operate the mouse, because the environment in which the sleep or operation of the PC is remote to the administrator when working remotely," reads the tweet (opens in a new tab) translated (albeit poorly) by Twitter. Take, for example, this ingenious individual who, it appears, hooked their wireless mouse up to a toy train. But that doesn't mean there aren't ways to trick the system into thinking you are active. "Note," cautions Slack (opens in a new tab) in bold type, "There is no way to set yourself as permanently active."
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