| ▲ | dspillett 2 hours ago | |
> Point is, you lost me after complaining about remote work. The/A point is, not everything works the same way for everyone. > working from a rainforest or the beach Would you really want to turn somewhere you enjoy into where you work. I at least go into the office so I have some work/home separation (though I'm effectively remote as the rest of the team I work with is usually elsewhere). > Remote working is an incredible privilege I'd today take a big big salary cut for. Actually working with people, not just occasionally seeing names and faces on a screen or in future largely interacting with mostly just this one odd individual called Claude, is something I'm seriously considering taking a massive pay cut⁰ for. AI isn't the reason, but it is the extra bale of hay that might finish me off in this respect. I'm not even really a massive “people person”, I avoid town at busy times, avoid big cities aside from the occasional tourist trip, I'm not even happy in a pub if it gets too crowded, and really fear being centre of attention in more than a tiny group, etc. But connecting with remote people feels so fake sometimes, and I have to concentrate to care about them or even keep them in my head at all¹ once the mail is sent or the call is ended, that they might as well be LLMs. -------- [0] at very least 50%, even allowing for differing tax allowances meaning I'd keep more of the gross pay [1] which takes a draining amount of mental effort over time | ||