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privilege of trip tier workers tho, no?
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Not top tier per se but definitely biased towards certain industries, and higher education workers. Fed study:https://www.stlouisfed.org/publications/regional-economist/third-quarter-2019/working-home-more-americans-telecommuting?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=newsletter_axiosedge&stream=business …
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I genuinely believe we continue to underestimate the power of the “internet” itself, it’s the core underlining aspect here regardless of many of the other nuanced conversations
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It’s absurd to me that so many “powered by the internet” companies still resist remote work.
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It just makes sense. Every time that I want to invest in an office, someone with one tells me not to.
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Collaboration in person for highly technical / abstract projects really needs to happen in person. Conversely, maybe cities just need more dense city planning- then the difference from home to office is 30 minutes in neighborhoods you walk around anyway
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I’m curious how this compares within the tech industry where theoretically nearly everyone could work from home to do their job (vs being a waiter, truck driver, etc).
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If you own/live in your truck, is that considered work-from-home?
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Čini se da učitavanje traje već neko vrijeme.
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Number of Americans working from home fulltime has nearly tripled over past 20 years, and trend is accelerating 