Have you returned to working in a physical office?
Displaying poll results.23078 total votes.
Most Votes
- What AI models do you usually use most? Posted on February 19th, 2025 | 21651 votes
- When will AGI be achieved? Posted on April 24th, 2025 | 6404 votes
- Do you still use cash? Posted on February 13th, 2025 | 5802 votes
Most Comments
- What AI models do you usually use most? Posted on February 13th, 2025 | 78 comments
- Do you still use cash? Posted on February 13th, 2025 | 54 comments
- When will AGI be achieved? Posted on February 13th, 2025 | 47 comments
Hybrid (Score:2)
I’m doing a 60/40 split - on-site some days, remote others.
I’m surprised this wasn’t one of the poll options.
Re: (Score:2)
Switching from hybrid from a previous in-office is a great leap forward in a lot of industries.
Re: Hybrid (Score:2)
Re: Hybrid (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yep, already had remote working in place, for dealing with weather events. Now I work 60/40 in office some weeks, 40/60 other weeks. Depends on work load.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Hybrid (Score:2)
Re: Hybrid (Score:1)
We've been working from home for the past 2 years due to COVID. We were recently requested to prepare to return to the office for 2 days a week, starting from May. I can't say I'm eager to do so.
Re: (Score:2)
Same. I'm 2 or 3 days a week in our office, the rest remote.
Not going back. (Score:2)
The moved our dev group so we report to someone in New Jersey and the local folks don't want us back in their office. So I will be teleworking from now on. It started with covid, but they figured out we don't need to be in the office we can get our work done remotely so I'm on full time telework !!!! Yeah!!!
Need to re-baseline productivity (Score:2)
Re: Need to re-baseline productivity (Score:2)
Some of us don't work! (Score:2)
Retired, unemployed, etc.
Re: (Score:2)
Retired, unemployed, etc.
During my long career . . . I've met some folks who have been employed not retired, who drew great salaries . . . but didn't work either.
Obtaining jobs like that and convincing management to continue funding them seem to be an Art, rather than a Skill.
oh I get it (Score:2)
technically they have been not working from home.
Re: (Score:2)
Yeah, but I sometimes wish I was still working, notwithstanding the last couple of pricks I wound up working for... One of the big TLCs shall remain nameless since the best manager I ever worked for was also there. (For my amusement I was actually toying with standup comedy before this Covid comedown.)
Won't work in an orifice, nope! (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Ancient languages ? So you code in Linear-A [wikipedia.org] ?!?
Re: (Score:2)
The glyphs of Linear-A look very laborious to write, I'd dread to write "IDENTIFICATION DIVISION" in it.
Re: (Score:2)
I hear you and am in the same boat. Been working from home for the last few years and I'm not going back to an office ever. I don't *need* the money any more and could retire yesterday. But I like what I do and am happy to do it - even though it's mostly working with old technology. But I'm not going to commute to sit in an office full of wittering half wits who spend all day making meaningless Powerpoint presentations again ever. Not even if they offer a million a day.
Office environments are simply to
office re-modeled during COVID and assigned desks (Score:1)
office was re-modeled.
no one has a permanent desk anymore. Its all shared corroborative spaces now. Only enough shared desks for 3/4 of the staff at any one time. Have to book a spot on an app to come in. Then clean out everything at the end of the day so it can be wiped down overnight. They gave us lockers, just like being in high school. Additionally onsite parking has tripled in price. (office is not public transport friendly).
Almost seems like they don't want us to come back.
Re: (Score:2)
They gave us lockers, just like being in high school
Do you guys hang out and smoke in the bathroom?
Re: (Score:1)
It's a possibility. I'm a 53yr old C/UNIX dude and work with a bunch of VMS/COBOL developers. So some weed will get smoked.
Re: (Score:2)
We hung out at the fast food joint across the street and smoked (weed).
More than a few (Score:1)
I've been working from home for more than a decade.
Re: (Score:1)
Same here. I've been working remotely for almost 20 years.
Re: (Score:2)
The same. Haven't held an office job since 2004.
No Desk (Score:2)
I started at this company during COVID and no desk has been assigned. As far as I'm concerned, since the team is spread around the US, there's no good reason to go in to the office. Boss is in Canada/Arizona, dev team is in Chicago, Texas, and Seattle, QA team is in South Carolina and India. My coworker and I are the only ones near the office.
[John]
Re: (Score:2)
Same situation for me. I started in June 2020, and though I would have gotten an office as manager of the dev team, I don't even have a desk at the office. Our remote work situation is now permanent.
Back in the office we go (Score:2)
We having been working under a "Hybrid" model since June, 2021. We have been relocated to a smaller building where we need to be in the office 40% of our time. Oh joy. I work for a State Agency, and throughout the state, each agency has determined what is best for their employees. Some have not had to return to the office yet, even at this late date. To say that Morale has been impacted is to say the Grand Canyon has a bit of depth to it.
Vodafone incompetence forces me back into office (Score:2)
I have been working remotely for 2 years now, except that for the last 4 weeks cable Internet in my street in urban Berlin has been completely offline. So I currently spend a lot of time in my office. My work PC no longer works properly, so even in the office I use the Lenovo Tiny PC I bought 2 years ago for home office in changing locations.
Continuing remote work (Score:2)
Went home for covid, stayed home, and now with so many people threatening to walk, work-from-home is now a permanent option.
Permanent Remote Work Since CoVID (Score:1)
During CoVID, my company allowed most technology employees to switch to permanent remote work. I opted for this, as did many others.
Other: Shop Floor (Score:1)
Status quo (Score:2)
I've worked from home for years. The company I worked for imploded in 2001. Our largest customer bought us out, then what was left slowly disintegrated. When I was the last one standing we tried a shared office space. This had its advantages but eventually we decided it was costing us more than it was worth. So I packed up my laptop and router and set up shop at home.
I can work anywhere if I have fast internet and reasonable time zones vis-à-vis head office in Dallas. I applied this a couple of years
work you say? What's that? (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Honest advice? Be prepared to get paid what you got when you were 17....
Best way to fill a gap is to do something and make them happy - look at startups that can't afford to pay much.
Once you have a job in the field - finding a new one is much easier. Good luck!
Re: work you say? What's that? (Score:1)
Do you explain the gap i your resume? Has someone on the hiring end of decisions, gaps that have reasonable explanations are fine. It doesnâ(TM)t need to state much detail. Something like health related disability, fully recovered since x, future prognosis clean.
If itâ(TM)s just a black hole, then I wonder what youâ(TM)re hiding. You donâ(TM)t have to provide details, but health issues happen and thatâ(TM)s understandable to me. I would just want to know thatâ(TM)s behind you n
Re: work you say? What's that? (Score:2)
I am my own boss (Score:2)
I mainly work from home.
Office building sold (Score:2)
Once everyone realized that meeting in person wasn't actually necessary to do the job, the office building was sold. I love working from home. Office buildings are always either too hot or too cold. There are people there who like to do things like microwave broccoli and tuna. And offices are noisy with people wandering in every 15-20 minutes, which is a major distraction when focus is required.
Re: (Score:2)
Almost same here. Acquired by a new owner effective Feb 1 2020, right before lock-down. New owners sublet our existing space from previous owners. Early March offices in major cites went WFH, mid March all locations including mine do as well. Mid-April comes word that WFH is working so well, all offices with less than 50 employees would close permanently, leases are cancelled, here is a sign up sheet for a day and time to come get your stuff.
I did some prep to WFH at least part time starting early 2019,
Changed the job (Score:2)
I've moved to remote-only company after my previous workplace started mulling about getting back to the office.
Hybrid (Score:1)
Work remotely now... (Score:1)
After Covid my employer wanted us back in the office 4 days a week.
I left the company for another company that allowed working remotely.
I don't work anymore (Score:1)
NO RETURN (Score:1)
No more office (Score:2)
I was laid off during work-from-home in 2020. Got a remote job. It's staying remote.
No (Score:2)
"Have you returned to working in a physical office?"
No, and I never will.
I'm done with office-related bullshit- long commutes, co-worker drama, inclement weather, traffic, commute-related car accidents, and all that other happy horseshit that they want you to put up with.
I'm happily working at home making 6 figures and I have zero intention of returning to an office, ever.
Re: (Score:2)
I have nearly 20 years F2F experience with an in-demand computing technology that not too many native English speakers are conversant with, and my written and spoken English are better than those of the next 999 native speakers you're likely to meet. When someone asks to see my résumé, I just tell them to search for books under my name on Amazon.
*You* might have to worry about getting replaced. Me, I've changed countries 3 times and I've taken my job with me each of those times—most recently
Thanks to covid, we can now work from home 2 days (Score:2)
a week officially, compared to 0 before. Some of us already worked from home now and then before, but it is great that we now can do it twice a week.
Missing option (Score:2)
Come in for meetings only (Score:2)
Some meetings - primarily those that are intended to be brainstorming / creative type meetings, will be held in the office. Those sort of meetings just work better in person. I also go to quite a few conferences for work, and I'm eager for them to get back into the swing.
Otherwise I'm going to carry on working from home permanently, not due to Covid but because if you're just sat in front of a screen it's a better way to work.
We were already some way towards that before Covid. Now, there's no going back.
I'm retired! (Score:1)
Depends how I feel that day (Score:3)
Here's the thing. I actually don't mind going in.
Everyone has their own office with a door so its as distraction-free as it would be at home. They have a nice gym and even without that, I walk around 0.75 miles a day just around the office based on my Apple Watch. There's a top notch cafeteria thats currently free, and the pandemic showed me how much I like letting someone else decide what's for lunch.
I know every office situation is different and if this was any of my previous jobs in cube farms I'd be more inclined to stay remote, but if some companies want people back, they should try making it actually worth coming in.
It Depends (Score:2)
Worked part time in an office (Score:1)
I was part of a group that the company used to explore the possibility of people returning to the office full time. I was working three days a week in the office, two days a week from home. Unfortunately, that all changed in December when I was struck by a truck while riding my motorcycle back from lunch. Since then, I've been working from home full time till my leg is fully healed.
My employer has converted to fully remote (Score:1)
Q: How many people work in Head Office? (Score:2)
A: about 10%.
An oldie but goodie.
(For the purpose of the poll, I'm retired. If I weren't. I'd probably be working either remotely or on a customer's site.)
Was about to come back, office closed (Score:1)
No more office to come back to.
We have an option to use WeWork space for free, let the conference room orgies begin!
So many possibilities! (Score:2)
Working from home (Score:1)
Feels like work but I'm not getting paid to do it
Remote before, hybrid during, hybrid after (Score:1)
Worked in an office for first time during COVID (Score:1)
96% Poll (Score:2)
Worked in the office until COVID, but never again (Score:2)
I work retail (Score:2)
Almost completely at the office (Score:1)
I was sent to work from home for 2 weeks, when the cases started exploding in my country. Since covid had little impact here, it's been business as usual ever since. Most of my coworkers have had it, but I've been careful and avoided it, since I'm type 1 diabetic and have enough problems to deal with.
I'm at home, wife moved back... (Score:1)
I was working at home before Covid, and like others no way am I going back to any regular office situation even if I changed jobs.
My wife however has had to go back to the office - but not as much. They used to be able to work at home two days a week, after going back now they can work at home three days a week so some improvement there.
Honestly though even that amount is not really needed, she worked at home just fine for a year and a half and they could have done without coming in regularly at all.
Survey depends on which job .... (Score:2)
I lost a job because of COVID when it first started. (The fallout from the lockdowns and eliminating public events and travel decimated the company I was employed with.). I wound up getting hired on at Amazon to do data center I.T. support for them, which would have required a lot of travel around to various locations to replace bad laptops and so on.
Unfortunately, soon after getting hired for it, the company went to an "all hands on deck" mode where they wanted all of us doing phone or chat support (since
I love working from home (Score:1)
Retired (Score:2)
Going on my 5th year now. I guess you could consider managing my investments work though.
No ,,, (Score:2)
No, full time remote now (Score:2)
Nope... (Score:2)
I've been remote for around 8 years now with occasional travel to an office. I wouldn't trade it for anything other than a massive increase in salary. Not that it matters since my nearest office is 5 hours away in a different country.
The company I work for (software, about 500 employees) is taking an "if you want to" approach. Offices are opening, they'd like to see people but no plan to force people back. Considering that over the last 8 years we migrated heavily from a must be in office policy to almost 5
No office to return to. (Score:2)
The company sold off the office buildings, and then leased two (of 5) back. So there isn’t room for very many people to return to the office. No services, either. No coffee, no lunchroom. Well, the room is still there, but no lunches to be had in it.
transition to remote (Score:2)
Hybrid (Score:2)
There was a single month of working 100% remote. Other than that, it's been 2 days per week in the office and 3 days remote. Management has noticed that developers can write code at home as well as they do in the cube farm.
Hybrid schedule (Score:2)
I'm doing part time in the office and at home.
sabbatical (Score:2)
Neither job is RTO (Score:2)
My previous job reduced their back-office space footprint by 50%. Per the CIO, being in-office should have a reason, and not be "just because".
My new job is full-time remote, hard stop. Remote work has been so successful they've eliminated most of their back-office footprint.
(In neither case has the Customer-Facing real estate been reduced)
We're fully remote (Score:2)
Our CEO announced six months into the pandemic that we were now fully remote. I'm OK with that .. although I wouldn't mind the occasional f2f meeting with the team, say once every 2-4 weeks. in Toronto, Canada.
Missing - 'I remain so ill I can't' (Score:2)
Trying to force my body to achieve has taken me from sort-of-able to consider part-time-work to housebound.
Bringing this back to the topic - 'I remain sick enough to be unable to work due to covid, despite it being many months ago'.
https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.medrxiv.org%2Fcontent%2F10.1101%2F2022.03.18.22272607v1.full.pdf may interest.
' Many heal
Retired (Score:2)
But still very relieved that the lock-down is over.
Re: (Score:2)
If you are referring to refusing Covid vaccination, be aware its main side effects are...
Re: (Score:1)
If you are referring to refusing Covid vaccination, be aware its main side effects are...
This is what happens when your government is owner/operator of your health care and your news.
Re: No Ta! (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
You're feeding a troll, and I note that a troll then fed upon you.
Re: No Ta! (Score:1)
Re: No Ta! (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Good, now stop shit-babbling.
I'm not dead yet (Score:2)
it's like three jabs if you do it properly.
Re: (Score:2)
My employer hasn't (yet) requested people to return to office. I started working for this company during the epidemic, and was told I could work full-remote, all the time.
If they mandate office work, I'll submit my resignation. The salary is not my only (or my main) source of income, therefore I can afford putting my foot in the door and not taking shit from anyone.
With that being said, it's unlikely this would happen. My team is spread out all over the country, with only one member living in the same city.
Re: (Score:2)
OK Doomer
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Don't forget the part about the US-funded biowarfare labs in Ukrane that Russia invaded in order to neutralize.
Re: (Score:2)
And what about people who took the russian covid vaccine?
Re: (Score:2)
Is there some reason why you feel it necessary to repeat yourself? I mean, we appreciate the message of good cheer and all, but...
Re: (Score:2)