▲ | throwaw12 4 days ago | |
it's not about missing amenities, it's about pressure from your peers and additional eyes in the office to make you work. At home you can literally spend whole day in front of TV and work a little, in the office you can as well watch TV, but not consistently, every day for full day. | ||
▲ | simoncion 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | |
> it's not about missing amenities, it's about pressure from your peers and additional eyes in the office to make you work. I agree. Though, you seem to have missed the part of my statement where I said "[It is a not-infrequent sight to find] folks sleeping, reading, or otherwise slacking off atop [the company-provided couches and comfortable chairs in the office].". Add to that the fact that it's bloody hard for a casual onlooker to distinguish "doing real research on the Internet" from "fucking off on one's computer", and also the fact that heading out for a long lunch or coffee/smoke break to "talk strategy" [0] with a coworker is a common activity in the office, and you end up with a lot of tacitly-company-sanctioned fucking off on company time. Like, a staggering amount. Perhaps the companies you've worked for have all been merciless results-focused taskmasters and the situations I'm describing are entirely alien to you. If that's the case, then -for you and your coworkers- absolutely nothing relevant would change in an all-WFH environment. [0] Read as "shoot the shit where noone can overhear" | ||
▲ | Aeolun 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |
I find the opposite to be true. If I’m at home I better push a commit, because otherwise people will think I’m slacking off. If I’m in the office and visibly in front of my computer however, I can be doing anything at all and I’d still be considered productive. |