Fujitsu is looking to change the way we work with a range of clever gadgets.
Let's get to work!
Hit the road with a connected van, allowing you to more efficiently make deliveries and appointments.
Radio frequency identification (RFID) tags in the delivery items or the equipment in the van talk to the van's inventory system so you can check items in and out.
If you don't have the tool or replacement part you need to finish a repair, you can check the system to find the nearest connected van that has what you need.
In the cockpit or cab this 360-degree camera setup helps you see what's going on all around you.
Capture a complete picture of a collision or accident and it can be beamed straight to head office or the insurance company.
Attached to this hard hat is an augmented reality system consisting of a small camera recording what you see, and a small screen that covers one eye and overlays useful information over whatever you're looking at.
This is what you could see in the eyepiece when looking at, say, a piece of machinery: notes and instructions on how to use or repair the kit in question.
Armed with the relevant instructions in your eyepiece and voice control commands, your hands are free to make the repairs.
Speaking of keeping your hands free, this concept ring design reads your gestures so you can control or write with the augmented reality kit without juggling a pen or notebook with your tools.
Uh-oh! If you take a spill at work, a tracker tag brings help straight to you.
This map of a work facility shows where employees are, and can mark hazardous areas to warn you if you stray into the danger zone.
In the office this system combines ceiling-mounted projectors and cameras to create an interactive workspace.
Scribble on the desk with a special pen, and the note is quickly converted to digital text so the results of your meeting can be saved for later.
Stick your phone on the boardroom table and the surface becomes a huge duplicate of your phone's screen.
Another innovation is this biometric scanner that reads your palm. The veins in your palm are as distinctive as a fingerprint, allowing you to pay for stuff with a swipe of your hand.
The same palm-reading technology is installed in this new Fujitsu Stylistic Q736 tablet, which can only be unlocked by authorised handprints.
Right, time to get back to work!