The article [The Type-A Bathroom [WSJ]](http://online.wsj.com/article_print/SB113893265421064039.html) the sanctity of the bathroom has been compromised by a new trend in construction that caters to workaholics.
This trend is not just appearing in “smart homes.”
_The humble bathroom, long a place of refuge and solitude, is playing quiet host to more workplace transactions. Bathroom business has gone way beyond tapping out furtive emails on a BlackBerry. Lately, more hard-driving homeowners have converted their loos into virtual satellite workspaces, with retractable desks or waterproof touch-screen monitors. Manufacturer Acquinox of New York says sales of its steam shower/whirlpool units — a hands-free phone is standard in each — nearly tripled last year to 14,800 modules. Wisconsin-based Seura, meanwhile, reports rising sales of its vanity mirrors, which feature LCD screens in the glass. The mirrors, starting at $2,400, let users check their tie-knot, then flip a switch to watch the embedded TV._
>Many Type-A bathrooms are showing up in high-end “smart homes,” which feature computer systems that let homeowners control music, temperature and lights from wall-mounted touch pads. Now, builders and interior designers say, more owners also want toilet-side technology.
When I read the WSJ article, the authors casually mentioned the phrase _toilet-side technology_. I was not familiar with it and I had to look it up.
I went to one of my favorite vocabulary resources (goodness knows I need it) [Word-spy](http://www.wordspy.com/index/Culture-HousingandArchitecture.asp) and looked up _[toilet-side](http://www.wordspy.com/words/toilet-side.asp)_.
> Relating to something positioned beside
> or within reach of a toilet.
They used the WSJ article as an example of its correct use, proving yet again that the WSJ is a leading-edge publication. 😉