xyst a day ago

They say this now. But in 12 months (or the next layoff period), they will move from hybrid to full RTO.

Still a shitty move to mandate RTO. Most people (IT folks) have spoke with do this routine:

0) daily routine to prepare for day 1) 1 hr commute to shitty office 2) login to computer, do calls with cross regional (and international) teams over Zoom/Teams/Webex or whatever conferencing system 3) teleconferencing with boss or manager 4) teleconferencing with company stakeholders 5) work on features and push code to remote systems (VCS, CI/CD…) 6) eat shitty food at nearby places, or use the low quality vending machines or cafeteria 7) logoff 8) 1 hr commute back home

There are _some_ roles which may require in-person. But those were mostly sales folks. Some IT folks that deal with physical assets did require RTO (ie, data center / network engineers).

  • sbrother a day ago

    I think the worst part is 9) at night, do more work that requires focus time while no one is bothering you, since expectations got calibrated to when everyone had a private office and more control over their own time.

    • macintux a day ago

      Yep. Many of my days are 4-6 hours of meetings in the morning, 2 more hours of paperwork/email/coordination activities, go get dinner, then work another 2-3 hours.

      Thank goodness I can work from home. I know in some ways that makes my flexibility more damaging to my work/life balance, but the tradeoff is worth it to me.

      • sbrother a day ago

        Yep that schedule is pretty familiar for me as well. I’m willing to do it when necessary; I feel like it’s fair given the flexibility and trust I’m given as a fully remote employee.

        When I’ve worked in the office in the past, the laptop stays closed as soon as I leave work at 5. They don’t get to have it both ways.

    • chii a day ago

      > since expectations got calibrated to when everyone had a private office and more control over their own time.

      which is why you should not be doing overtime to meet expectation. Expectation (aka, productivity) needs to drop when RTO is mandated.

      • dingnuts 20 hours ago

        the only thing I can do more efficiently in the office is socialize, so I assume that that's what they're talking about when they talk about collaboration and culture and all that shit, so how's the wife?

    • kentbrew 18 hours ago

      Don't forget 10) get your ass in bed by 10pm so you can haul it out at 5 to get to work again on time tomorrow.

    • rewgs a day ago

      There's no way in hell I'd agree to additional remote work if I'm being demanded to return to the office. Either it's remote or it's not.

      • derwiki 5 minutes ago

        If you won’t, others will. That’s this job market.

    • ein0p a day ago

      That’s how it was for me circa 2004-2005. The only way I could get anything real work done was from home, after hours. During the day all we did was sit in meetings and report status to each other and to the higher ups. Worse, then the higher ups decided that we don’t need a sustained engineering team for the past two releases (boxed software) and the team would context switch between building new stuff and patching what’s already out there, 2 releases back. I said fuck it and left.

  • worstspotgain a day ago

    In the Bay Area, 1-hour commutes are generally for older and apartment people. Younger family people are in the 2+ range.

    • ryandrake a day ago

      When I lived in the Bay Area, my commute was ~2.5 hours each way. I would have killed for a 1 hour commute.

      • barsonme a day ago

        That’s insane. 13 hours of work + commute. After 7 hours of sleep you only have 4 hours left in your day for literally everything else.

        • commandar a day ago

          The push for the 8 hour work day over a century ago was often accompanied with slogans to the effect of "8 hours work, 8 hours rest, 8 hours for what we will."

          5 hours round trip commuting a day is giving up over half of your prerogative time to simply shuffling from one place to another.

          The Bay Area is lucrative monetarily and all, but there's just no world where that's worth it for me.

          • spacemadness a day ago

            I’ve worked in tech in the Bay for over a decade and met a handful of people with that insane of a commute. It’s not normal.

          • red-iron-pine 15 hours ago

            A lot of people had to literally fight and die for that 8 hour day too.

        • jjulius a day ago

          >13 hours of work...

          ... what?

          • shrikant a day ago

            13 hours of (work + commute) -- that's 5 hours of commute + 8 hours of work.

            • Sirizarry a day ago

              The parentheses help a lot. I also thought the original commenter was implying 13 hours of work + the 5 hour commute and couldn’t figure out where they got the 13 from haha

      • kstrauser a day ago

        I had a commute from East Bay that was a 30 minute bus ride to downtown SF and a 15 minute walk. I didn’t mind it so much when I had to do that daily. The bus ride was a great time to read a book or the news. The walk was a nice chance to get some air and exercise and practice mindfulness, or to go the opposite way and listen to a podcast or some music.

        I far prefer my current commute of walking downstairs. I could abide the 45 minute ride-and-walk commute if there were a legitimate reason I needed to be somewhere in person. No one would pay me enough to commute 5 hours a day.

      • amy-petrik-214 a day ago

        The bay area is godawful in terms of expense, traffic, regulations "WHERES YOUR LOICENSE". Prop 13 means the new home buyer has 10-100x higher property taxes than their old home neighbor. Permitting madness means that in the santa cruz mountains, any construction is on essentially a permanent freeze. Even driving an old car, generally considered to be an "antique" if older than 25 years in the other 49 states, why in California there is no set time, it is a set year, 1976. So, according to classically rabidly insane california logic, in the year 3000, a 1,000 year old car would be "new" and not "antique"

        the saving grace: whereas lane splitting (driving a motorcycle between two cars) is illegal in 49 states and grey-area in DC, it is outright totally legal in California.

        Thusly those with interest and probably low anxiety and medium-high deathwish are exempted from traffic

      • epolanski a day ago

        I find it absurd how Americans can't give up on their suburbs and car centric development dystopia and then spend so much time in their cars.

        • worstspotgain a day ago

          People would go for condos if there were cheap large ones nearby. Alas, the supply restrictionists blocked all vertical development decades ago in order to inflate prices 10x and capture tech wages. That left SFHs and townhomes in far away places.

          • angmarsbane a day ago

            +1 for family sized (3 bedroom condos) if they existed close to work we could have families and jobs - imagine!

            • ktosobcy 20 hours ago

              I'm living in smaller-ish city in Spain, we rent ~120m2 2bedroom flat for ~650€ and it's city center so we don't even think about getting a car as it would be more hassle to take it out of the garage then actually walking to the nearest shop. Lots of squares / parks around usually full of kids playing :)

            • worstspotgain a day ago

              Now that's crazy talk.

              You have to sign over most of your future earnings to the guy who's selling you the property, in exchange for (hopefully) getting the next guy to fork over most of theirs. The game is so hardcore that the pyramid scheme is as strong as ever.

        • tesch1 a day ago

          Because door-to-door transport is faster than public transportation. Average American commute time is 26 minutes, what is it where you live?

          https://transportgeography.org/contents/chapter8/urban-trans....

          • kstrauser a day ago

            Not where I live. A bus ride takes about half an hour to get to downtown SF. The same drive during rush hour would take an hour, easy. You couldn’t make me drive to work here.

          • ktosobcy 20 hours ago

            Well... in most cases in densely populated places you simply can walk to the job or ride a bike.

            In BCN for example commute would be most of the time ~15-20 minutes (walking+metro). Car would easily take twice as much.

            Of course if you are living in urban sprawl and nothing is close and even getting something to eat requires "a trip" then yeah - door-to-door car would probably be "better"

          • longnt80 a day ago

            They didn't necessary talk about time in commute. Maybe they thought spending time inside cars was useless. Sure your commute is shorter but most Americans also have to drive everywhere in their cars. To be honest, it's shit.

            Edit: also, the chart is too simple to know how they conducted and came up with the data.

            • tesch1 7 hours ago

              Tbf, some Americans might think it's shit to live life in a 100 m^2 box they don't even own and commuting in a crowded stinky wagon for longer than 26 minutes.

              Not sure there's just one right way to live though. I wasn't saying there is, just sharing some data to a discussion oblivious to the realities of most Americans.

        • itsoktocry a day ago

          >I find it absurd how Americans can't give up on their suburbs and car centric development dystopia and then spend so much time in their cars

          I agree that kind of commute is insane, but maybe we don't all want to raise our families in shoe boxes (often surrounded by filth and crime) in the city centre (as if everyone in France lives in downtown Paris).

          You may find that thrilling, but I don't. None of it.

          • epolanski a day ago

            Your arguments has way too many fallacies, like if the US has any shortage of crime and filth filled suburbs, but I'll cut it short.

            Everybody should live in the context they prefer.

            That being said, if the suburb dystopia was instead built around sensible public transport with good trains, metros and well planned gathering and commercial areas I could have some sympathy.

            But no, everything is planned and built around the concept of owning and driving a car for everything.

            Which is also why you end up having so many suburbs that are the facto dumpster ghettos, people not owning a car cannot even easily commute daily to a job available downtown.

            Good public transport and proper city planning are some of the best social equalizers and life improving engines out there. For everybody, including and especially people wanting their own home rather than living in apartments (that by the way don't have to be small, albeit smaller dimensions have plenty of benefits too).

          • Aeolun a day ago

            There is zero relation between filth and crime, and living in the city centre. At least inherently. There may be a correlation where you live.

            • badlibrarian a day ago

              "In 2005, Harvard University and Suffolk University researchers worked with local police to identify 34 "crime hot spots" in Lowell, Massachusetts. In half of the spots, authorities cleared trash, fixed streetlights, enforced building codes, discouraged loiterers, made more misdemeanor arrests, and expanded mental health services and aid for the homeless. In the other half of the identified locations, there was no change to routine police service.

              The areas that received additional attention experienced a 20% reduction in calls to the police. The study concluded that cleaning up the physical environment was more effective than misdemeanor arrests."

              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broken_windows_theory

              • Aeolun 15 hours ago

                I’m not sure what you are trying to say? It feels like you should be trying to refute what I said, but it’s actually in agreement?

                • Izkata 13 hours ago

                  They probably read your comment as three things instead of two (I did at first and had to take a second look). Tighter binding between the paired items might make it read better, instead of the awkwardly placed comma:

                  > There is zero relation between filth/crime and living in the city centre.

          • smugma a day ago

            The irony is the vast groups of tech employees that choose to live in San Francisco and commute to the suburbs.

        • galdosdi 2 hours ago

          That's the nice thing about the Bay Area, you get to have the best of both -- live in a shoebox with no green space AND commute for hours to your job.

        • 10xalphadev a day ago

          I live within an European city - not downtown, but relatively close. My commute by car over ~10km is 18-20 mins, same distance by public transport takes 40-50 mins, depending on train reliability and workers not striking.

          So change my mind?

          • longnt80 a day ago

            I don't intent to change your mind because it's often that people are stuck to their opinions.

            Just want to say that sitting in public transports I can do other things such as doing some work or reading a book. While sitting in a car feels terrible to me. 30 minutes of driving a car is a lot worse than sitting in public transport. Also, if I have to commute by walk/bike, I also feel much better.

            • tomcam a day ago

              > Just want to say that sitting in public transports I can do other things such as doing some work or reading a book.

              In my experience that kind of activity was often not possible, especially in cases where one bus was late and I had go worry about getting to the connecting stop on time. Likewise I couldn't really read b/c I might get distracted and miss a connection.

              This was all pre-Internet and of course pre-unlimited data plan. These days I might have a downright pleasurable experience on public transport listening to podcasts under those conditions. Except here in Seattle there are just too many maniacs on some lines.

          • epolanski a day ago

            What's there to change your mind? There are areas that are poorly connected and cars are much more convenient.

            I live outside Rome, Italy, my SO works downtown. It takes her 35ish minutes to get to work by train, it would take her way more than one hour by car.

            Hell, it takes her colleagues living in Rome center often an hour to get to work on a 6 km drive.

            The funniest thing was when I worked with a guy that commuted by train from Naples! That's 150 miles away. And he would still get back home quicker by train than people living in Rome.

        • RobRivera a day ago

          Yes, we Americans love our cars, oil, wars, wwf, and guns.

          • worstspotgain a day ago

            Well at least we still donate to preserve endangered species. 1 out of 5 ain't bad!

            • abeyer a day ago

              But only because we're confused and think we're still paying for pro wrestling. :D

        • hiatus a day ago

          What steps do you suggest an average person take?

          • epolanski a day ago

            None? This has to be dealt with at city planning level by investing in proper public transport. Because money in US only subsidizes car drivers.

        • doitLP a day ago

          I find it tiresome how someone who lives elsewhere thinks we can waive a magic wand and change trillions in infrastructure and a century of entrenched car culture. Unless you have workable solutions please keep the peanut gallery comments to yourself.

          There are solutions but they are the hard “get people to buck all incentives and change their behavior for the common good” kind that take a lot of work.

          • shiroiushi 20 hours ago

            I'm not sure what other people can do, but personally I decided that instead of wishing in vain that the place I lived in was this way, I moved across the world to a new city and country where I could live car-free. Now I ride a bicycle to work and use subways and trains to get around on the weekends. Vote with your feet, I guess.

        • Foobar8568 a day ago

          I am at 2h30 total commute, and will be soon at 3h-3h30, in Switzerland.

          At least, I can work remotely 2days+what ever I need depending of the day.

          • ktosobcy 19 hours ago

            Uhm... that's like almost getting from one side of Switzerland to another (Zurich-Basel is like 1h by train?)

            • Foobar8568 10 hours ago

              Well there are plenty of people going from Montreux or further to Geneva. With the changes in schedule, any trains going around the lake past Renens will be slower by at least 5min.

              Over the years, I had met several workers who were doing 2h+ per leg commute.

            • Rinzler89 19 hours ago

              Maybe he lives and works somewhere that's not point to point connected by a direct train connection as the crow flies.

          • Rinzler89 21 hours ago

            Holy shit that commute is crazy. Have you requested to work fully remote?

      • FPSDavid a day ago

        That is a ... choice.

        • ryandrake a day ago

          I mean, I guess it's a choice in that I'm not willing to move my family into a tiny shoebox or split the cost with three other roommates in order to afford to live in my employer's city. I don't make $300K+ at a FAANG like everyone else on HN, so I have to live in a place farther away that is supported by my compensation.

    • hamandcheese a day ago

      Everyone I know with a long commute can afford a shorter commute, they just trade the commute for a larger single-family dwelling.

      • smugma a day ago

        Most of the tech employees I know in SF could have shorter commutes with larger houses but choose to have smaller houses and longer commutes to live in the city rather than the suburbs. Why? Access to people in parks, cafes, bars, restaurants, events, “culture”, single people.

      • jrks11o a day ago

        yeah, “can afford” doesn’t mean I should, props to them

        • hamandcheese a day ago

          I'm mostly just observing that long commutes for techies is driven by American cultural norms. I have some sympathy for the ones with kids, zero sympathy for the rest.

  • BeetleB a day ago

    I think if you're required to RTO, you should insist on not having Zoom/Teams/Webex on while in the office.

    "Come to my cube if you need me".

    Way before the pandemic, I almost never had those tools running on my work laptop - unless it was for a (rare at the time) cross-geo meeting. A coworker once sent me a screenshot of how I appeared in the IM tool - Last seen 120 days ago.

    Sadly, that went away once we hired our first remote person.

    • closeparen 10 hours ago

      In the best case you might have all the engineers rolling up to the same line manager sitting in the same office, but those above entry-level are expected to spend a good portion of their time collaborating across teams (and therefore across sites).

      • BeetleB 5 hours ago

        Varies quite a bit by company. Pre-pandemic, we had phones in our cubes :-) Thus I could easily turn Teams off. My immediate team was physically nearby, and people elsewhere could email. They'd call if urgent.

    • deciplex a day ago

      If you're required to RTO and doing it you probably aren't in a position to "insist" on jack shit.

      • lbreakjai 17 hours ago

        You have to fully lean into it. Or at least pretend to. My company implemented RTO, citing the usual collaboration and culture, and I've suddenly turned into the biggest in-person sycophant every time they try to organise workshops online "because it's much easier".

        We have offices on both sides of the Channel. It means travelling, which is expensive, hard to align, and really disruptive, but since the RTO mandate I suddenly realised _how valuable_ those in person interactions were, and how much more creative we were thanks to those watercooler chats.

        I'm interviewing elsewhere, so I'm having a bit of fun seeing how far I can push the malicious compliance.

    • datavirtue 16 hours ago

      No one else is in the office on the same days. I recently seeked out a job that was in-office. It was just a reminder that the model is dead beyond repair. These boomer CEOs can't be gone soon enough. I'm full remote now and the engagement, interaction and team comraderie are FAR better.

  • hintymad a day ago

    > shitty office

    I'm not sure this applies to Google. Their offices and food are pretty nice. And their gyms are top-notch. If you stick with the salad bar, I'd venture to guess the freshness and nutrition variety will be better than most IT guys can get at home.

    Of course, this does not mean RTO won't suck.

    • closeparen a day ago

      Tech office amenity spaces are visually impressive, but then your actual workstation is just a desk in an ocean of desks, where you have to wear noise-cancelling headphones to hear yourself think.

  • MollyRealized 2 hours ago

    No disrespect intended by this, but I'm a little confused. What makes a direct contradiction of what Google said a reliable statement? Is it just pessimism bias?

  • angmarsbane a day ago

    RTO for sales folks doesn't make sense to me either. Typically you want your sales folks on the road not in your office. I think sales is a good candidate for fully remote.

    • DebtDeflation a day ago

      You 100% want your sales folks at customers not in your office.

      Most roles can be hybrid/remote. Regardless of Tech, Finance, Marketing, whatever, if the job involves sitting in front of a computer or being on the phone all day it's a good candidate. If you were doing the job remotely from March 2020 through the end of 2021 and being effective, it's a good candidate.

      • bathtub365 a day ago

        Sales also has long established and standard ways to measure performance

    • teractiveodular a day ago

      Amazon is not mandating RTO for sales folks.

      • deagle50 a day ago

        Good, they didn't when I was in sales at AWS (well before Covid).

  • nostromo a day ago

    You're forgetting that a lot of people still have to WFH, they just do it now before or after going to the office - so it's even worse than you're stating.

    I know some folks that work from the west coast with customers on the east coast, and they regularly are taking meetings at 6am from home, then commuting in, and getting home late.

    If we return to the office, we should not also be expected to work long hours when we're at home. It's the worst of both words.

    • technick a day ago

      I was told at a previous job I couldn't work from home but they expected me to take my laptop home with me just in case something happened. My response was I couldn't work from home and just left my laptop at work.

      • chii a day ago

        > but they expected me to take my laptop home with me just in case something happened.

        which is called being on call, and it needs to be paid. Otherwise, you're right, you cannot be expected to work (at home or not) in off hours.

    • jerlam a day ago

      West coast seems like the worst time zone to be remote. You have to get up early for meetings with your coworkers, and they can get your immediate feedback on their problems. But when you have your own problems, it's often too late for them to help you.

    • deciplex a day ago

      >It's the worst of both words.

      And it's quickly becoming the status quo.

      They really don't ever let a disaster go to waste, do they?

  • whstl a day ago

    > There are _some_ roles which may require in-person

    IME when working in a Product role, it worked better from the office. Doesn't have to be every day, but being able to talk directly to people is much better than having to schedule meetings.

    Tech positions don't even need daily video calls IMO. My team experimented with a few days of written status updates and it was fine. But they chose to have a 10-mins stand-up mainly for socialization.

    • dijksterhuis a day ago

      > being able to talk directly to people is much better than having to schedule meetings

      i do not understand what people are talking about when they say things like this

          personA: hey @personB you got 20 mins to talk about XYZ?
          personB: yeah gimme 10 mins
          personA: k, i’ll grab a coffee
          personA: /zoom start
      
      that’s ^ not scheduling a meeting. that’s having the same direct conversation but with like one extra step (joining zoom).

      the rest of what your comment says is fair enough. i just see this mentioned a lot in anti-WFH leaning comments. often about how hard it is to mentor a junior.

      (i can’t remember the exact slack command but you hopefully get the idea).

      • whstl 18 hours ago

        Well, that's already 30 minutes instead of 30 seconds.

        And that's without taking what sibling poster said: sometimes people take 1h, 2h, 1 day to reply you on Slack.

        With face to face communication you convey more than "the message".

        This comes from personal experience: dealing with tech people with Slack-only communication is fine. Dealing with non-tech people is much different.

        For example, I just RIGHT NOW have to ask a Salesperson about whether a feature is ready to go into prod. I can just walk 10 meters to their desk and get an answer in 5 secs. OR I can write to them in Slack on email and get an answer Monday, because they have 20 unread Slack messages and 500 unread e-mails.

        You might call this "a bother" to them. To this Salesperson, which happens to be my buddy: this is how they prefers to work.

      • what a day ago

        You might be leaving out the one hour delay between the first two messages.

  • skybrian a day ago

    Google had flex time for all the time I worked there, for a dozen years, well before the pandemic. I don't see any particular reason it wouldn't work for them now?

    • teractiveodular a day ago

      Google has always had the flexible working hours and didn't mind the occasional "plumber coming today" day, but before COVID it was very allergic to permanent WFH arrangements.

  • bethling a day ago

    I don't know if that will happen. A lot of the cloud heavy offices moved to shared desks for engineers, so there's only a desk for 2 days/week, so they don't have enough space available for everyone to return full time.

    It's still possible, but I don't think would be as easy as an annoucement.

  • yegle a day ago

    At least Google's offices have nice perks: free gym, healthy and nutritious meals, healthy and tasty snacks. Personally those perks are enough to negate the terrible commute.

    I was told Amazon's offices has none of these.

  • stego-tech a day ago

    I mean, my experience says you’re right, but the red hot labor summer combined with Dell and Amazon _and_ Apple workers vocally opposing such mandates and leaving outright give me hope that maybe, _maybe_ leadership will accept this is a losing battle and embrace the new norms.

    Barring that, the younger working demographics have made it abundantly clear there’s a zero tolerance for the traditional corporate bullshit. When mandates first came down, they responded with “coffee badging” and the like; I don’t doubt there will be another adaptation, like arriving late and leaving early, baking the commute time silently into the work day.

    The writing is on the wall, and the modern worker knows how badly they’re being screwed over. I’d argue it’s a wiser decision to let the workers do their jobs from wherever, consolidate offices into continental HQs, and decentralize the workforce to disincentivize collective action. Workers get the flexibility they need to survive in the current cost of living/housing crisis, and companies don’t risk bleeding talent or earning the wrath of a Union election.

    Everybody wins except commercial landlords, but they’re not exactly the good guys here anyway.

    • Spooky23 a day ago

      Tech organizations are all overstaffed from the pandemic. Engineering is usually boom/bust. Likely outcome is recession and purge. The plucky gen alphas will be in the cube farm to pay they rent.

      • stego-tech a day ago

        It depends on your perspective and context. I refuse to subscribe to the defeatist attitudes of "this is how it has been and therefore always shall be" that's in your post, because otherwise what's the point of participating at all if change is impossible?

        The engineering boom-bust cycle is a recent phenomenon (past fifty years) relatively speaking, and it doesn't mean it's a permanent fixture of civilization unless we choose to accept it as such. I reject permanence and advocate change, and so should you.

        Besides, "Gen Alpha" won't be in cube farms even with a RTO, because Glorious Leaders (TM) in tech threw out cubicles, personal identity, and privacy in favor of hotel seating and clean desk policies. A return to cubicles would be a marked improvement over the present status quo, if we could just figure out the right marketing buzzwords to trick the C-Suite into believing it's the Next Big Thing (TM).

        • Spooky23 a day ago

          I’m not defeatist. We’re at a high where massively capitalized companies have been in a hiring binge for skilled technical employees for a long time. It’s been good to me - my family is more prosperous by any measure than my parents are grandparents, who were arguably smarter and bolder people.

          All of these companies have been incredibly successful… but can they sustain their historically unprecedented growth? Maybe. But when that train slows down, Intel is the example of what happens.

          • stego-tech a day ago

            Oh goodness, if we’re talking about sustainable growth then boy do I have some hockeystick charts to reject that notion. For decades, growth has largely been an illusion created through clever accounting and inflation metrics - it’s why the industry keeps desperately trying to jump on “brand new” stuff like crypto, blockchain, and generative models: a new industry means actual growth as opposed to illusory growth, which would create a new wealth class above and beyond any of the existing billionaires of today. For all of Sam Altman’s own blowharding, he’s not wrong that whatever the next brand-new revolutionary industry turns out to be - AI, space mining, molecular fabrication, whatever - will require literal trillions of dollars to explode into a 100x ROI.

            That said, if we abandon this idea of “infinite growth forever” and accept that market saturation and incremental improvements provide opportunities to rebalance structures and remediate institutional flaws, then there’s a lot more hope to be had. You can’t build new things forever, and eventually need to take time to pay off outstanding debts, improve existing systems, modernize legacy infrastructure, and basically make everything simpler and sustainable for whatever the Next Big Thing turns out to be.

            …unfortunately for me, making that pitch to leadership usually just gets me laughed out of the room because maintenance and efficiency isn’t “sexy”, nor does it boost their share valuations. Ah well, won’t stop me from trying.

            • Spooky23 a day ago

              I think you have a really interesting pov that is thought provoking. Seriously - thanks.

      • mikrl a day ago

        >The plucky gen alphas will be in the cube farm

        I find it so ironic that around the turn of the century, cube farms and suburbia were the ultimate evil and seemingly a fate worse than death in the pop culture.

        Meanwhile in 2024, me and my Gen Y/Z colleagues daydream about a comfy dedicated cubicle and a quiet 3.5 bedroom with matching furniture and a spot to grill.

      • saturn8601 a day ago

        >The plucky gen alphas will be in the cube farm to pay they rent.

        Gen alpha? You're talking about a generation that the oldest cohort is ~10-11 years of age.

        Will there even be enough of them given their potential parents can't afford a house? Will they go into tech after seeing this "learn to code" cohort getting screwed in the marketplace?

  • ghaff a day ago

    Inside sales maybe. But sales reps who physically meet with customers spend very little time in company offices in general.

  • Spooky23 a day ago

    There’s a ton of fraud in this space. You need at least hybrid to keep that at bay.

    At a previous place, we chose hybrid RTO over intrusive surveillance. My opinion shifted from being a full remote advocate after I caught a half dozen folks with various schemes and scams.

    The straw that broke the camels back was a guy who lied about where he was living. He was going through a divorce and the ex-wife ratted him out to the state tax authority to get the reward. The company was fined by both states. The ex made like $50k.

    • fhdsgbbcaA a day ago

      Define “fraud”? If you get your work done in two hours and can’t progress until a teammate does their end, is it better or worse if you are scrolling HN in an office or at home?

      I run my own company, I do not give a single fuck how, where, or when people get their job done. I only care they deliver.

      Likewise, people who need to be watched over are not the employees I want in the first place. I’m not running a daycare for children. Adults can make their own decisions, if you need me over your shoulder to deliver you aren’t useful to me to start with.

      • thousand_nights a day ago

        > Define “fraud”?

        the BigCorp owns your life, the rights to tell you where to be 75% of your waking hours and what to do.

        get the eight hour job done in two hours and slack off for the rest? that's theft and fraud. get it done in two hours and admit to it? that's more work for you for the same pay, to fill the rest of your time.

        then you go online and some overly enthusiastic yc sponsored clown will dunk on you for not giving your life away to a corporation

      • rad_gruchalski a day ago

        > Define “fraud”?

        He lived in another state but paid taxes where he supposed to be living. The company was held liable.

        > I run my own company

        Then you should understand what for you can be held liable and what your responsibilities are. It may be very expensive not to know. In extreme cases you may be held criminally liable.

        > I do not give a single fuck

        It’s just a recommendation: I’d suggest you do because your tax authorities certainly do.

        • fhdsgbbcaA a day ago

          For people making tangential points about tax compliance, no shit. Obviously I’m talking about work environment, not saying I’m cool with tax fraud and embezzlement.

          The point I’m making is if you want to feel like a Big Boss go ahead and stand over people, if you want an a-team doing a-team shit hire people who don’t need a babysitter.

      • glzone1 a day ago

        A lot of business don't want to bother performance managing that closely. Plenty just worked off of trust.

        * You hire someone, and then figure out someone else is doing the work (usually because they are making stupid mistakes, and the person you hired can't be that dumb)

        * Your staff work odd hours that make coordinating hard (side gigs / hussle's etc).

        * I think the rumored record of multiple full time jobs someone was working was 5+.

        * We interviewed someone who was upfront they would be working for us while working for her full time day job remotely.

        We deal with sensitive information. Having data go overseas etc is a no go for our business at least.

        Note: If you have to deal with government agencies that have gone remote you KNOW that the throughput is sometimes < 50% what it was before. You can almost immediately tell as someone dealing with them. No one answers their phones, all voicemail, all super long delays (week+).

        • ryandrake a day ago

          > * I think the rumored record of multiple full time jobs someone was working was 5+.

          > * We interviewed someone who was upfront they would be working for us while working for her full time day job remotely.

          I'm not sure how this is justified as a problem.

          CEO of multiple companies: A-OK

          SVP serving on multiple companies' boards of directors: A-OK

          Salaried office worker working for multiple companies remotely: Fraud

          Hourly worker working three jobs to make ends meet: A-OK

          • Spooky23 a day ago

            CEOs and SVPs have contracts that deal with these issues. Salaried workers commit to full time hour commitment.

            My employer allows outside employment for some roles if appropriate. It requires disclosure and may not be possible depending on what you do. Double dipping is not acceptable.

            I’m a VP level person who serves on a couple of boards and help with a family business. It’s all disclosed and approved with mutually agreeable boundaries.

            Another example is an attorney - it’s ok for some private practice, but not ok if that practice will reasonably involve an entity that the company is likely to interact with.

          • mattgreenrocks a day ago

            Capital patches out any attempt of non-capital to exit the system quickly.

          • donkers a day ago

            I wouldn't call it fraud, but it is probably violating the terms of the employment contract. I know it is for my company (I bet people still do it anyway)

            • hiatus a day ago

              What's the recourse for violating your employment contract beyond termination? Ineligibility for unemployment because you were fired "for cause"? Seems like it's worth the risk since you can be fired for no reason at all.

          • appendix-rock a day ago

            That’s just, like, your opinion, mahn. I don’t recall anyone else saying that those things were OK, or that they were comparable, which they aren’t? Your MO seems to be to just make your comment so high-effort to reply to that nobody will bother.

        • fhdsgbbcaA a day ago

          I know a person who is absolutely brilliant, first class intellect. They have two remote jobs and have gotten softly reprimanded at both for essentially making other people look bad because they get so much done.

          As far as I see it, both companies get an a-tier person who outperforms the rest of their staff. This person gets two paychecks. Everybody wins.

          But in the “we own your time and soul” employee relations model he’s a “crook” or a “fraud” because they aren’t sitting in the company canteen talking about bollocks all day.

          • wyclif a day ago

            That's why he should have kept it a secret. Envy is a pervasive effect. Do everything possible to counteract it.

            • fhdsgbbcaA a day ago

              It is a secret, they’ve been doing it since pandemic started!

      • Spooky23 a day ago

        If you want to work like a hourly contractor, be one. Work your hours.

        If you want to be a $250k engineer and fuck around on Netflix waiting for something for 75% of the workday, you’re demonstrating a lack of maturity and professionalism. Or you work for a really dysfunctional place.

        If you’re running your own shop, you’re empowered to run it to your needs. That’s awesome. Mine are different.

        • fhdsgbbcaA a day ago

          My point is about supervision. If an engineer making a quarter mill needs somebody over their shoulder to produce, that’s the core issue.

          If during an afternoon where they have to wait for somebody else, I’d rather they go for a casual walk and think through a hard issue slowly and carefully than sit at a desk artificially, writing dumb emails to keep up the charade they are “busy”.

          (Of course the person they are waiting on now has to read said emails instead of finishing their task - busy work is net drag on everyone.)

          For jobs that require thought we do very little to provide space for reflection, and imho that’s dumb.

      • grayfaced a day ago

        And if you find out that your developers were actually in North Korea and you've violated sanctions, would you care then?

        https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/justice-department-disrupts-n...

        • uludag a day ago

          So the logic is that even though they may get their required work done, the risk that they may one day flee to North Korea and cause you to violate sanctions requires that you have to constantly bring in all of your employees to a central location and soft surveil them to mitigate this?

          Why not just require a single background check or interview them on-site?

          • grayfaced a day ago

            I was responding to someone that says they only care that they deliver. And that was the statement I took issue with, there are numerous factors that employer should care about beyond performance. As another example, the liability raised from creating a toxic workplace. I said nothing about bringing people in. You raise two things that would be good controls for identity fraud.

            • appendix-rock a day ago

              Don’t worry. Most people here that “run their own business” are in VC-funded startup la la land anyway. It says very very very little about knowing how to actually productively steer a group of people.

        • CommieBobDole a day ago

          Why do we do this all the time? Somebody makes a slightly hyperbolic statement, and everybody replies to them with the most outlandish and extreme examples of things that would be problems if they literally meant the exact thing they said.

          "People can wear anything they want out in public, I don't care"

          "Yeah, well if they wore a suit made of plutonium, or one covered with guns that fired randomly in every direction, I bet you'd care then".

          I'm going to give the guy the benefit of the doubt and assume that he probably does the due diligence to verify that his employees are legally able to work wherever the company is, and aren't using company resources to launch cyberattacks on the NSA, aren't international terrorists trying to destroy the moon, etc, etc.

          • mattgreenrocks 15 hours ago

            The Internet, where the comment section contains a bunch of people cosplaying as compilers that somehow manage to be more pedantic than the Rust borrow checker.

        • chgs a day ago

          You could have them turn up to an office for a few days when they start work if you wanted

        • yieldcrv a day ago

          They’re literally doing the work. They’re not accused of placing backdoors, they’re not accused of anything aside from the US government running an antiquated sanctions regime, and just doing the work. The US government isnt charging companies with OFAC violations, so there is no reason to care. North Koreans learned how to be a fake Staff Software Engineer and do non-fake things for real RSUs.

          Companies shouldnt burden the rest of their employees for social verification, for something that isnt a problem for the company.

          • grayfaced a day ago

            That sounds akin to saying a security breach doesn't matter until there are consequences. Not many companies would be comfortable being in the position that they have not verified the identities of employees who have access to payment processing data.

            • yieldcrv a day ago

              They did verify the identity to the standard required. The employee lied.

              Although analogies compare dissimilar things with a common attribute, your analogy relies on saying all employees are security breaches. These are employees competent to work in medium sized all the way to big tech companies as software engineers.

              • grayfaced a day ago

                Every company with sensitive data need to consider insider threat risk. Many compliance standards require background checks specifically because employees can lie. My point is simple, it's not as simple as "employee complete tasks? Y/N" but that every employee is a potential liability that businesses need to do risk management according to their role. Remote work makes that more complicated, and requires different controls.

      • fallingknife a day ago

        And it should be that way. The responsibility for tax cheats should rest entirely on the person not paying. But that's not how it works. Our government has passed authoritarian laws that put the responsibility on the employer too even if they have no knowledge of the crime.

      • buzzerbetrayed a day ago

        Surely nobody is referring to scrolling HN during work hours as “fraud”

        • ferbivore a day ago

          No, I think the current buzzword for that is "time theft".

    • bityard a day ago

      "Work in the office" or "remote surveillance" are not the only two possible options here.

      I work (remotely) for a company that treats their employees like adults. I have a work-provided laptop, but it doesn't contain any surveillance-ware and my boss doesn't care where I am or what I'm doing as long as I'm getting my stuff done and showing up for zoom meetings. When they hired me, they ran a background check to ensure that I was who I said I was, among other due diligence.

      There are more companies like this. They may not be in the majority, but they exist.

      • matt_j a day ago

        Same. My work is very flexible, we can take time throughout the day for an appointment or errand, and in return, we have a strong work ethic that ensures that things get done, which sometimes requires overtime or after hours.

        It's nice to be treated as an adult and it goes both ways.

    • deagle50 a day ago

      who are these people who barely do any work from home? My office is an amusement park with free food and amazing views and yet I still work from home to minimize distractions and wasted time. My output is measurably higher when I work from home.

  • slashdave a day ago

    > But those were mostly sales folks.

    So, are there really so few biotech / hardware people here? Hard to do lab work from home.

    • casion a day ago

      > mostly

      Yeah, but here's an exception!

  • deanCommie a day ago

    You're making it sound as if working from home was something that everyone did eternally, and not something that started in 2020 out of necessity.

    Going through your routine:

    1) Noone forced these workers to live 1 hour from the office. In fact in the beforeCOVID times, people made an effort to live closer to where they work. Sure many can't afford to, but we're not talking about baristas here, right? But highly paid IT staff.

    In the cases like Google the office is far from shitty.

    In the cases like Amazon, the offices are more mid, but located central to where people live in cities. (We'll come back to this)

    2/3/4) Legitimate problem, that exists SPECIFICALLY BECAUSE OF HYBRID. If everyone RTOs 5 days a week like Amazon did, it's no longer an issue.

    6) If it's a nice office like Google the food isn't shitty. If it's a mid office like Amazon, it's downtown surrounded by the best restaurants/cafes the city has to offer.

    • chii 19 hours ago

      > Noone forced these workers to live 1 hour from the office

      > made an effort to live closer to where they work

      sacrificed a lot to live closer, out of necessity, pre-covid. Then, it turned out that WFH can be made to work, with little to zero loss in productivity (if not gained productivity).

    • surajrmal 13 hours ago

      If you work on a distributed team, then you were already talking to a screen in the office almost constantly. It's only gotten worse since covid.

    • rewgs a day ago

      > You're making it sound as if working from home was something that everyone did eternally, and not something that started in 2020 out of necessity.

      Err...what? Let's not rewrite history here. Plenty of people -- especially in tech -- worked remotely before Covid. Yes, the numbers increased dramatically, but don't make it sound like it was unheard of before the pandemic.

      Also: tons and tons of people have no choice but to live far from the office. Rent is cheaper and more plentiful the farther out you get from metro centers, simple as.

skzv a day ago

I go to the office almost everyday by choice. Free food, snacks, and coffee, gym, and medical clinics on campus. And it's just nice to get dressed and leave the house.

But it's really nice to have the flexibility to WFH when I need to, especially just mornings to skip traffic.

  • ENGNR a day ago

    Same! Tech job, my co-founder and I are only a 5 minute drive or bike ride from the office. It’s nice to get dressed and have that separation from home.

    I feel like the commute is what people are actually feeling the worst, because it’s unpaid time that they just straight up lose. Being close to the office resolves it for us.

    • redserk a day ago

      Unfortunately a new job, even 5-8 miles away, may turn a then-5 minute commute into a 45m-1hr commute in many metropolitan areas.

      I think more management needs to realize that forcing in-person isn't inherently beneficial. There can be value in meeting up if it's appropriately planned, though.

      My current management has been very accommodating with remote/hybrid. If there's a meeting where face-time is beneficial, people voluntarily come in -- but there's no pressure to do so. Generally, we find it easier to pop into the office for a day every few months to whiteboard things instead of dealing with Miro/Zoom. We have a mix of remote folks who live next to the office, some folks within a couple hour drive, and some who need to fly in.

      A former job of mine used to fly people to the same location 4x a year for a week to hash out a quarterly plan and grab drinks. The whole agenda was laid out and not a minute felt wasted. While not everyone went 4x a year, everyone was given the opportunity to do so, and this helped alleviate friction.

      Another job of mine had remote folks fly in every 3-4 months for a couple of days at a time. Some teams did it more frequently (1x/mo for a couple days) when critical projects were in the pipeline, but they'd return to normal afterwards.

      • jart a day ago

        Oh tell me about it. I used to have no problem with a 2 hour commute taking metro-north because I could just unwind on the train, and I loved walking into majestic places like grand central station. But a 60 minute commute to travel 10 minutes in the bay area flipping destroyed me, because it was nothing but stop and go traffic the whole way.

      • epolanski a day ago

        With good public transport and metros such low distanced would never take that long.

        But Americans just can't give up the freedom of being stressed in their cars.

        • redserk a day ago

          I'm a big supporter of public transit but this absolutism isn't grounded in reality.

          A 5-10mi change in destination in almost every system that I'm aware of can add a tremendous amount of time to a commute.

    • time0ut a day ago

      I don't have the discipline to stop working when I work from home. Being able to go into the office every day is a nice perk for me to help structure my day. If it was a longer drive, I'd probably feel differently.

      • ultimafan a day ago

        I feel the exact opposite- I didn't have the discipline to keep working when I work from home- my productivity plummeted during COVID and skyrocketed when RTO was mandated again. At home I'm too easily distracted by errands, hobby projects in the garage, picking up a book to read "just a chapter" on a coffee break and realizing 2-3 hours have passed, and the like. In office I feel obligated to actually be productive from the combined shame of being seen as a slacker and less physical opportunities to goof off.

        • mschuster91 a day ago

          > In office I feel obligated to actually be productive from the combined shame of being seen as a slacker and less physical opportunities to goof off.

          If anything, an office makes for more unproductivity than working remotely. No random people showing up at your desk with "can you help out real quick (LOL) here and there", no "hey we gotta wait for colleague XYZ before we head for lunch break", no coffee room talk...

          • epolanski a day ago

            No no and no.

            Stop thinking all people are the same.

            Some people are just unproductive at home, some are more. That's life.

            I know plenty of people that are absolutely unproductive at home, they just get distracted easily as the previous user.

            And there's many people that just can't work without carrot and stick provided by people/bosses around them judging their daily routine.

            Seriously stop thinking that every person works as you.

            We are all different and reality is that WFH is tough for many people from many points of view, it's not for everyone.

          • ultimafan a day ago

            That's true. I suppose if you are a person who has an iron will and good discipline the potential for productivity is much higher at home where you can lock in and just grind for a few hours with no interruptions. I am not that person and suspect many others aren't either, so there's that conflict between potential and real world outcomes where some people are just more productive in office even with all the distractions you mentioned than in an environment where you can actually focus in a flow state but have no surrounding social pressure to do so. I suspect management figures the same which is probably part of why RTO is being pushed so hard.

            • generic92034 a day ago

              In my eyes the individual differences here could mean that it would be better to leave the decisions about WFH or office work to the teams. The team manager should know who can perform well from where and they can react if an arrangement does not work out as expected.

      • phito a day ago

        Wait you need discipline to... stop working?!

        • time0ut 16 hours ago

          Sadly, yes. I lose track of time and allow work to consume all my waking hours. Having to travel a little helps. I still fall into it if I need to work in the evening after I get home.

        • epolanski a day ago

          I can relate.

          I work (or at least spend the time at the PC even if I don't) around two hours more per day from home, while the office made me quit much sooner.

          • skirmish a day ago

            I personally resorted to logging time I spend working in a spreadsheet to keep weekly hours under control. Otherwise I often spend evenings reading work-related papers then the next day I feel guilty of taking a longer lunch. No more, the spreadsheet averages it all out.

      • mvanbaak a day ago

        Separate your work location from the house life. Best thing i did was putting a desk in the guestroom and turn it into a home office. If im there im working, if im in any other part of the house im not

    • mschuster91 a day ago

      > I feel like the commute is what people are actually feeling the worst, because it’s unpaid time that they just straight up lose.

      There's also the associated side costs: getting ready to leave work (more for women, many feel socially obliged to put on makeup), extra clothes washing (personally, I don't like to wear clothes I had to travel in public transport with), having to schedule around errands like tradespeople coming in for repairs or picking up parcels from the post office, and for those with children all the shit associated with that, like picking up said children from daycare (whose opening times often conflict with expected work availability) or transporting them to school and after-school stuff like sports training... and finally, even though people like to deny even the most obvious (like in Munich, the current explosion of covid in wastewater tracking), there is still a pandemic raging on plus all the other "regular" bugs like influenza, RSV, measles and whatever else shit children catch at school, distribute to their parents, who then distribute it around work.

      Had society actually learned anything from the two years of Covid dominance, in-presence work would be the exception not the norm, and people who have to perform in-presence work be compensated for their commute.

  • laweijfmvo a day ago

    Used to feel the same way, but that was when I always used to always choose apartments near my office. Now that I don't want to live near my office, I prefer to work from home.

  • _proofs 16 hours ago

    this sounds like the modern, more privileged version of the coal mine's "company shop", and all the dependencies that industry created as "nice gestures" to their employees just to keep them around and on-site as much as possible.

  • angmarsbane a day ago

    On-site childcare would guarantee I go into the office.

  • deanCommie a day ago

    You are in the silent majority.

    This is a lukewarm take shared by most, but it at best doesn't cause outrage or go viral, and at worst gets you accused of being a bootlicker for the C-suite.

    So none of us speak up and the dominant perspective continues that nobody wants to actually go to the office.

cush a day ago

I know multiple people who worked at Amazon (I say worked because they've recently quit) who would log two of their three weekly badges by going in the office at 11:59pm, and again at 12:01 am. Their team, managers, and collaborators never actually expected them at their desks. It was all to appease this mandate.

It's not surprising that Amazon has moved to 5 days a week despite so many people gaming the system and not actually caring about being in person. There's likely some algorithm driving this entire movement that doesn't take into account any of the real nuance that team dynamics requires, let alone taking into account that there are tangible benefits to remote work.

  • qqtt a day ago

    I honestly don't think there is any algorithm. For all the bluster and commitment to being "data driven", none of the companies I've seen mandate RTO have provided any sort of data-driven reason why it needs to happen. Amazon's policy might as well be "Jassy feels it in his gut that RTO is better for the company so we are doing it".

    All the communication of RTO invokes the most fanciful and vague references to "magical hallway conversations" and "increased collaboration" without a single data point to back up any of the claims.

    It has been almost humorous to watch such stalwarts of "data driven decision making" turn up a giant goose egg with respect to actual evidence on such a huge, impactful, and far reaching decision.

    • mvanbaak a day ago

      Amazons RTO is a hidden layoff round. They are overstaffed because they hired like crazy during the pandemic, now they need to slimmdown and will simply wait for people to quit because of the RTO and fire those that dont comply. And they dont have to pay anything because those that leave do so out of free will, and the fired people were simply breaking their contract

    • mmcconnell1618 a day ago

      Open office plans have data that shows it costs less than individual offices but it is sold as "fostering communication" and "team culture." The cost per office is easier to count than the lost productivity of a distracted programmer.

      RTO has similar data. If we require a highly distributed workforce to be in a specific physical location x amount of time, y percentage will resign and we don't have to pay severance or announce layoffs. That's easy to calculate vs. the lost productivity of individuals or the impact of losing top performers and lowering the bar.

    • spydum a day ago

      Only champion data driven decisions when they confirm your desired outcome. Nothing new under the sun.

    • bitwize a day ago

      Data-driven management is primarily to find goldbrickers and troublemakers through statistical mumbo-jumbo performed over shoddy proxy metrics. It's not supposed to promote or encourage sensible decisions.

  • deanCommie a day ago

    The irony is that these people are exactly the reason why Amazon HAD to move to 5 days a week.

    Because people didn't actually embrace the hybrid model, wasted time on petty protests like this, undermined morale and the hypothetical benefits of in-person colocation.

    If everyone actually tried 3 days a week, and had the benefits of in-person collaboration (instead of people coming in to the office to just sit on Zoom calls), then maybe the company could've kept doing 3 days a week instead of forcing everyone to 5.

    • christhecaribou a day ago

      “The proles rebelled, so Amazon dug their heels in harder” is not a great take. They’re supposed to lead, and they’ve lost their mandate.

asib a day ago

What I've found quite surprising in seeing these WFH vs RTO debates play out over the past couple of years is that even the WFH stans argue in terms defined by the employers.

The most obvious example of this is citing evidence that WFH makes people more productive, but there are various other arguments that try to position WFH as beneficial for both employers and employees.

I have opinions on many of the points made by both sides, but honestly it strikes me as the wrong argument to be having. The reason I want to be able to WFH is because I prefer it. I don't care if it's better for my employer or not, the same as I don't care whether working on Saturday and Sunday is better or not - I simply won't do it.

I know I'm in a privileged position to be able to say "I won't work in an office" and others have obligations that undermine their ability to show RTO employers the finger.

I guess I'm just surprised that people demanding WFH, simply because they want it, seem to be in the minority, judging by HN comments (fraught, I know). Perhaps this is a culture clash? I'm British, and this might be a US-centric thing.

  • zamadatix a day ago

    Like you say, the set of people who'd be pushing the argument from that angle is inherently pretty small. Basically either those that don't need money from a job in the first place + those that want some extra money from a job but only when it's extremely convenient and that boundary just happens to be WFH or not.

    The others don't inherently care more about their employer than themselves, they care more more about the money impact it means for their compensation. More efficient = more valuable to employer = more compensation. For employees benefit only = less valuable to employer = less compensation.

    • asib a day ago

      My labour history knowledge is pretty non-existent, but I assume past progress was often made via unions, e.g. 8-hour work day. Seems like this is a situation begging for workers (at Amazon and elsewhere) to unionise and demand the right to WFH through the power of collective bargaining.

      The workers that progressed labour rights in the past surely mostly needed their jobs too, so this situation doesn't seem unique at all.

      • zamadatix 8 hours ago

        (I want to preface this that I consider myself pro-union, so people don't just stop reading halfway through. Also this is all my 2 cents, I'm not an expert in these topics by any means)

        Unions can definitely solve it, be it the actual optimal thing to do for each individual or not, should everyone involved unionize. Even then though, workers would also like to work 2 hours a week for the same pay... it doesn't mean a union forming to do it would be successful. The same dynamics eventually come back into play: is it actually more efficient? If not, is that money loss something the union workers are willing to take? It's tempting to say "they can just force the business to cut profits anyways!" and... sure, they could, but they could do that while being more efficient and get even more money too. I.e. ultimately the union and people that make it up are just as interested in making sure they balance doing a certain amount of what they don't like with a certain amount of being efficient to get the most out of it. Whoever you make the group that needs to be convinced it's worthwhile you still need to convince it's the overall more efficient choice.

        On the topic of unions though, unions typically form for lower paid workers. Not that they never form for higher paid workers but they tend to have more options already, less to gain, and more to lose when joining a union compared to a lower paid workers. The amount of effort a business will put in to avoiding a union will also vary with pay as the relative asks tend to scale as well e.g. on pay a union for ~70k/year auto workers wanting a 10% pay bump is cheaper to accept than a union for ~140k/year tech workers wanting a 10% pay bump.

        I think tech workers will eventually make and join unions regularly. Maybe not in the current pay and political climate, but eventually. Until then our relatively small problems of "having to deal with showing up in person at work for one of the higher paying jobs" are not going to be as huge of drivers to unionize as places that wanted to keep fingers or earn a more average salary.

      • Izkata 12 hours ago

        Legal progress yes, but it had plenty of loopholes and pushback and wasn't normalized until the Ford Motor Company did it (combined with going from a 6-day work week to 5 days), because Henry Ford believed the extra downtime would increase productivity and possibly even demand for the cars he sold. His success compared to competitors is why everyone else followed suit.

      • dmvdoug a day ago

        They don’t make labor law like they used to, unfortunately. The Supreme Court has steadily been gutting it for 40+ years now, and unionism has unfortunately been subsumed into culture war politics so that even a bare acknowledgement of the imbalances in negotiating power between management and labor is impossible without getting entangled in tribal-political ideology. Which means there’s equally no hope that Congress will reverse any of the erosion of labor rights inflicted by the courts.

  • jatins 19 hours ago

    > the WFH stans argue in terms defined by the employers

    that just naturally follows from the employer-employee relationship and the fact is WFO has been the default for decades. So, somewhere the onus is falling onto employees if they want to go against what the default has been

    • asib 16 hours ago

      I totally agree the onus is on workers - employers spontaneously giving workers more rights is rare. I just think the onus is not on proving that WFH is good for everyone, and instead on bargaining collectively. Especially since these RTO orders seem to be veiled, free layoffs - arguments about productivity are totally hopeless.

      If Amazon engineers unionised, this RTO mandate could be fought without appeals to employers' business motivations. Workers shouldn't have to grovel for rights, we hold as much power as employers, and refusal to wield it is what hamstrings rights efforts.

vineyardmike a day ago

Google has been shedding office space in the bay. They probably don’t currently have enough desks, and they don’t feel like spending on the office space.

They’ve also been aggressively moving teams overseas. My guess is they won’t RTO, or at least not until their headcount matches desk count in core regions.

janalsncm a day ago

RTO is effectively a cut to your hourly wage since you need to commute. I think people would be less sore about it if Amazon and others extended an olive branch of “commute time pay” or something.

(And no, free food and snacks don’t count. Amazon doesn’t have that anyways.)

  • Ancalagon a day ago

    I just start my commute during work hours now and take standups from the car.

    • nickjj a day ago

      I wonder how different things would be if there were laws where if a company required you to RTO then your commute time is included in your expected working hours.

      Some companies are asking to RTO for half the week even if you're 50 miles away. Depending on where you're at that could be a ~5 hour round trip commute. If you factor in parking in certain places like NYC you're almost forced into taking a train so having meetings during the commute wouldn't be too realistic. That would mean getting to work at 11:30am and leaving at 3:30pm to work a usual 9-6 hour job. If you take a lunch with your commute then you end up working 3 hours total at the office.

      • what a day ago

        You could always move closer to the office, if you don’t like your 2.5 hour commute.

        • baq 20 hours ago

          yes that's exactly what executives mandating those RTOs do with their 100x median TC.

gerdesj a day ago

I'm the MD of a small company. My attitude towards WFH prior and post pandemic could not be more stark. I am probably a bit more chilled out in general but that is another matter.

MSP is a reasonable description of my firm. We have a helpdesk etc and provided calls/jobs/projects are fixed/process within SLAs etc then all is fine. I am now a lot more chilled about where people work from. In return, I know I get a lot back.

However, collaboration in person is useful and no amount of email or webrtc is going to replace that. We loosely require two days per week in the office.

crop_rotation a day ago

Not to mention coming to Google office has many perks, Amazon office is much much more barebones.

mrangle a day ago

There's going to be a significant exodus of Amazon employees once the mandate kicks in fully. A percentage aren't able to come into the office every day, due to unrealistic commute logistics. Google making this headline sets them up to catch a lot of talent at once, to the point that I suspect this may be part of the policy's intent.

  • epolanski a day ago

    We snatched a great talent from Amazon.

    And we didn't even need to throw crazy money, just full remote and 16 weeks of vacations per year.

    It's amazing what amazing talent you can get paying with time rather than money they don't need.

    • azemetre a day ago

      Wow 4 months is pretty awesome. Are you based in that USA? I worked at companies that had unlimited PTO and no one ever took that much time off.

      • epolanski 18 hours ago

        Europe/Italy.

        • arghnoname 3 hours ago

          That's wild, when I saw 16 weeks I assumed it was a typo and you meant 'days.' I should try to jump ship from FAANG-land

  • baq a day ago

    it remains to be seen if it will be a net positive for amazon, but people quitting is expected and the primary reason they implemented RTO. it's right there in the public announcement.

vb-8448 a day ago

for the moment.

my guess is that in the next 12/18 month all of major tech & big corps will follow the amazon's way.

  • christhecaribou a day ago

    These folks literally just saw what Amazon did and did the opposite.

    • SpicyLemonZest a day ago

      I'm not sure it's right to say they did anything here. All the article reports is that an unspecified Google VP made an offhand remark that no changes are expected to their 3-2 hybrid schedule - which used to be Amazon's schedule until Andy Jassy made an unexpected change.

      • christhecaribou a day ago

        How do you rationalize MSFT then?

        • SpicyLemonZest a day ago

          I'm not sure what you mean. As far as I understand, Microsoft also hasn't made any recent changes to their hybrid work policy or unconditional promises regarding its longevity. (I've heard of a _conditional_ promise from an Azure exec that hybrid work will stay unless productivity requires them to get rid of it.)

    • behringer a day ago

      They just want Amazon talent. Then they'll turn up the heat.

      • Hamuko a day ago

        You mean the ones that don't want to go to the office? What's the point of taking in talent, getting them up to speed at Google and then having them leave after 12–18 months?

        • whatsdoom a day ago

          You're not going to get a VP job talking like that.

        • sottol a day ago

          The general opinion here on HN seems to be that the most talented that can easily land a new job are the first to leave - might be a good time to skim the cream of the crop, even if for 12-18 months. Who knows, many might even stay when every other major company moves to RTO.

  • sneed_chucker 14 hours ago

    Maybe, maybe not. Amazon has always been the most employee-hostile of the big tech companies. Google and especially FB/Meta have historically poached a lot of engineers away from them just by being more competitive with comp and benefits.

  • blackeyeblitzar a day ago

    Maybe but I think this sort of exposed weak leadership at the top of Amazon (Andy Jassy) and/or their hidden goals of a silent layoff or protecting value of their real estates (at everyone else’s cost).

worstspotgain a day ago

Google proving that they remain a less Xitty company than Amazon. Yes, the bar is low, and yes, we'll see if it lasts.

  • sitkack a day ago

    No they have to alternate with the RTO policies, if they did this at the same time, it would trigger a recession.

tomcam a day ago

I love this.

My bias is that returning to office is best for the company. But that doesn't mean I'm right. Here we have a poorly controlled but real-life way to see which one is better. I get that we don't have optimal test conditions, but if Google switches back in a year like /u/xyst suggests, then I assume it failed. Not sure if companies have a reason to discourage working at home if it is equally likely to produce good results.

josephcsible a day ago

I wish this commitment had some kind of actual teeth, maybe something like adding "if we ever require RTO for you to keep your job, and you don't want to, we'll give you 2 years' severance with full benefits" to every remote employee's employment contract.

technick a day ago

Companies should be forced to pay some sort of commute tax every time they force someone to come into an office. Driving an hour to the office and back home, in your car has an impact on everyone and everything around them, it's time they pay up.

  • ProfessorLayton a day ago

    At least in the Bay Area, the commute is the tax that follows a severe lack of housing supply, which cities fight tooth and nail against, while encouraging more office space. Low density and driver-centric planning also makes public transport less feasible.

worstspotgain a day ago

My prediction is that good companies will eventually let you graduate to WFH. Beat the RTO group by X% to win WFH, stay Y% above to retain it. Eventually, the remainder RTO pool will be made up of slackers and people who live nearby. Just adjust X and Y as needed to retain quality employees.

The problem is that not all jobs are suited to objective performance metrics. The other problem are the PHBnazi middle managers who are insisting on RTO for personal aggrandizement reasons. They won't always win the day.

taskforcegemini 9 hours ago

make commute time count as work time and remote work will be embraced by companies. Those who can't work from home at least will have the benefit of less traffic on the road.

honkycat a day ago

RTO is going to be brutal for us in 3rd tier cities like PDX

The tech scene here SUCKS, but I much prefer the lifestyle to a large city ( plus, I can buy a house here. )

Not sure what will happen if the days of remote work ends. How will I get a gig?

There was a time in the mid 2010s were they were obsessed with "servant leaders" and "leading from the front"... those days are long-fucking-gone. Guarantee the executive class will not be forced into office.

  • ryandrake a day ago

    > Guarantee the executive class will not be forced into office.

    Absolutely, they will find some kind of excuse to justify their jet-setting around and spending time in their various homes across the world, while insisting that the worker bees cannot possibly do their work outside of an office.

  • cruffle_duffle a day ago

    > Not sure what will happen if the days of remote work ends. How will I get a gig?

    The same way you did in 2019. Like it always was.

    • closeparen 9 hours ago

      Okay, then give me 2019 home prices back.

  • dmitrygr a day ago

    Plenty of places are still hiring remote. Do not lose hope

ugh123 a day ago

Google will most certainly wind down office time on short-term leased offices or those expiring soon. There are likely many around the country/world they have. These could also be smaller offices or areas where they think they could possibly take a wash with a sublease in the current commercial real-estate environment.

39896880 11 hours ago

Dang, can we get a filter for RTO submissions? The discussion hasn’t changed in years. There is nothing new to say about RTO itself. If someone has insights about a particular company and their policies then fine, but we are approaching the fifth year since the original WFH shift.

th0ma5 a day ago

I would be fine in going to the office if they could make it so that I don't get sick. I got sick all the time even before COVID.

StarterPro a day ago

RTO Mandates are just attempted power moves by greedy CEOs.

We have people living on space stations and promising nuclear fusion, but we still have to be in the office to be productive? Gimmie a break.

kccqzy a day ago

Of course it won't. It doesn't have enough desks to allow everyone to be present simultaneously.

skinney6 12 hours ago

Google and AMZN on the phone: You going RTO? Yeah, sure totally going RTO. ANZN announces RTO. Google poaches all AMZN talent that leaves. Google goes RTO a year later.

righthand a day ago

I’m pretty sure my friend has been required to return to office for 3 days a week since after the pandemic.

  • wepple a day ago

    That’s hybrid, not full RTO

    • righthand a day ago

      Ah return to office in the Henry Ford dictated 5-days 40 hours sense, not coming into the office for most of the week sense.

mugivarra69 a day ago

they are watching and will make the switch if it pays off for amazon. dont trust any of the big corps.

blackeyeblitzar a day ago

I applaud Microsoft and Google for not going with a full RTO. But hybrid work still requires you to live near an office. True remote work enables an economy that is spread out, resilient, and lets people live the way they want. We have this capability so why not do it?

  • mushufasa a day ago

    > We have this capability so why not do it?

    sortof yes, sortof no.

    Aside from all the conversation about work culture, state taxes are a big barrier to fully remote work. States hate losing tax revenue. Notoriously, it is easier to register to do business in a state than to unregister. This is even harder internationally.

    For large organizations, remote can be the difference between one state's paperwork + regs + taxation, and every state and country under the sun's paperwork + regs + taxation. That is a real burden. Not just the paperwork + administrative overhead, but being subject to differing employment + everything else laws from *everywhere* will really muck up ability to run a consistent business.

    While fully remote startups can now access services to help with this, like PEO providers like Justworks/Deel, the reality is that most of the world is not setup to accept this at scale. I run a fully remote startup and still run into issues with vendor diligence departments and accounts etc. expecting us to have a physical office, and being totally bewildered when we don't. The people involved now understand remote work, but the systems --forms, insurances, tax nexus decisions, etc -- still very much aren't setup to handle it.

    Notably: if you are a bigger company, you can't put the toothpaste back in the tube with all these local governments, and you bet that every locality will be trying to extract tax dollars from the big firms with deeper pockets.

    • sethhochberg a day ago

      We see this all the time working at the intersection of the insurance / fintech space. I've had several big, legacy vendors make requests for multiple physical signatures on a piece of paper (printed and mailed or faxed, can't just annotate a PDF) from people who haven't even met eachother in person let alone ever worked at the same address.

      The kicker? These papers are access authorization forms to APIs.

      Your average tech company is probably reasonably well prepared to go truly distributed, but I bet many of their vendors aren't. Whole workflows in certain industries don't even conceptualize companies with employees distributed across offices, let alone companies with no office at all.

      (I've fought similar battles over not being able to provide a direct phone extension because I don't have a phone on my office desk and even if I did I'm not at the office anything close to full time, and I don't provide my personal cell phone number to vendors... but thats a whole different topic. Employees exist without phone numbers! Entire offices exist without phones!)

      • papercrane a day ago

        > I've fought similar battles over not being able to provide a direct phone extension because I don't have a phone on my office desk

        I'd probably just setup a cheap DID number with someone like VOIP.ms and have it go straight to voicemail.

        I agree though, it's not a fight you should have fight. Office phones are going the way of the fax machine.

        • sethhochberg a day ago

          This is what we've eventually given up and done. At a certain point, the vaguely-principled stand gets in the way of business. We're playing in an old-school corner of the world and need to meet it in the middle.

      • mushufasa a day ago

        is this your startup? I'd love to chat about what you've found work. we're in the intersection of fintech / wealth (which overlaps with insurance).

        I've gotten by just fine for the past few years but we are starting to see more questions about this that require us to change our legal address away from a residence. I think we got away without much trouble solely because of the pandemic, and now it's over we're going to see a lot more questions about this.

        It's not worth the future of the whole business to fight big vendors/customers over addresses.

        • mushufasa a day ago

          Basically, for those who aren't living this, the physical address is mostly a liability thing. Insurance expect to be able to (imagine worst case scenario) walk into an office and blame / seize assets / arrest people if things go south. Sometimes you can just provide a residential address of a founder / board member, but all the diligence forms etc expect a physical office building where you can find all the employees 5 days a week if you just walk in.

    • ygjb a day ago

      > For large organizations, remote can be the difference between one state's paperwork + regs + taxation, and every state and country under the sun's paperwork + regs + taxation. That is a real burden. Not just the paperwork + administrative overhead, but being subject to differing employment + everything else laws from everywhere will really muck up ability to run a consistent business.

      This is a real burden for small businesses. The nature of Amazon's business as an online retailer with a massive distribution network means that for any significant market they do business in, they will have employees. Practically speaking, this is a solved problem for any state in which Amazon has a warehouse (which I think is probably all of them for the US?).

      • ryandrake a day ago

        All major payroll companies and employment law firms have long since figured out paperwork, taxes, and labor regulations in all 50 states. Unless you're so small that you don't even have an external payroll provider or legal counsel, "differences between States" shouldn't be a valid excuse.

      • mushufasa a day ago

        While Amazon may have the administrative capacity for handling the filings, that doesn't address the tax revenue politics + considerations (which i didn't write much about in my earlier comment).

        The issue of state tax breaks was such a big deal during their "HQ2" contest a few years ago that it actually became one of the top issues in the NYC elections that year. (to a large extent local candidate races became a referendum on how they felt about giving tax breaks to amazon in exchange for Amazon's commitments to employ a certain # of highly paid software + product people who would potentially contribute to the overall tax base. NYC people ended up electing politicians to stop the previously-negotiated pending deal with amazon, and amazon got enough blowback to say 'we give up' publicly.

    • whatshisface a day ago

      "Anywhere in California" would also solve the LA density problem.

    • Terr_ a day ago

      > state taxes are a big barrier to fully remote work

      What percentage of remote-workers are in a different tax-jurisdiction? Especially post-COVID I expected that the majority of remote-work involved people already in the same US state, merely with a nontrivial commute.

      • what a day ago

        Lots? I was at a very small company and almost every employee was in a different state.

  • gwbas1c a day ago

    > But hybrid work still requires you to live near an office

    Not as close as a daily commute, though.

    I live 60 miles from my office. It's just not practical to go in every day, so I go in once a week. I can also go in as needed, such as if there's a special guest, event, ect.

    I wish I could go in every day, but where I live is a compromise with my wife, and we have kids.

    If I were to go in everyday, I'd need to be much, much closer to the office. It wouldn't work for my family: Single incomes don't work very well near my office.

  • layer8 a day ago

    I would hate to live in a world where I don’t regularly meet with coworkers face-to-face. Remote communication just isn’t the same, you lose a lot of signal and are more compartmentalized from each other. I’m saying that as an introvert.

    But I also have a short commute and a nice office.

    • ghaff a day ago

      At my last company I was officially in-office but I basically never went in because essentially everyone I worked with was in a different office or even a different country.

  • makestuff a day ago

    IMO the downside of being that spread out is the infrastructure. Cities subsidize the suburban infrastructure because of the population density benefits. If everyone spreads out then infrastructure will suffer.

    • blackeyeblitzar a day ago

      Do cities actually subsidize suburban infrastructure? I am skeptical but I don’t know all of the details on how people come to that conclusion. What happens if the economy is more spread out? Also a lot of the people that own and run companies that give a city its tax base live in the suburban areas. It might even be reasonable to say that they are the ones subsidizing the city and not the other way. How do you think about these angles?

      • 0cf8612b2e1e a day ago

        It is simple enough to break it down by area. If a city has N people per city block, but a suburb has 1/N people per city block you lose out on all economies of scale. Each individual dwelling requires water, electrical, gas, roads, etc. More efficient to amortize that across more people per unit of infrastructure. A road is always going up cost $/foot. Best if that road is being used by 100k people per day instead of 10.

        • blackeyeblitzar a day ago

          Yes but that’s a cost of infrastructure angle, not an argument for who is subsidizing whom. I’m saying the fact that the economy is unnecessarily focused into cities makes suburbs look worse in tax revenue but it doesn’t have to be that way.

          • 0cf8612b2e1e a day ago

            You cannot ignore infrastructure costs and then ask who is subsidizing whom. Infrastructure is an enormous governmental expense. Not just the initial installation, but the ongoing maintenance as well. Economies of scale are always going to result in the higher density installation being more cost effective.

      • Spooky23 a day ago

        Suburbs in general are losers from a government operations perspective.

        They work because they are mostly newish. Core functions like keeping roads functional rely on state and federal aid.

        Many older suburbs are more in decline now. Especially in 2nd/3rd tier metro areas. It’s just less obvious than the inner city or rural areas. They need growth to thrive. Once they fill out, population ages out, schools decline, and a vicious cycle starts.

        Money policy has kept that going by organizing the economy around real estate. I don’t think it’s sustainable to continually recapitalize single family homes.

        • antisthenes a day ago

          Suburban infrastructure is usually much more sparse, of lower quality and a lot of it is shifted to the local business/homeowner.

          As an example - city water vs Water wells & Septic tank/fields. Gravel roads without sidewalks, etc.

          So it's not 100% evident that cities subsidize rural counties. Cities do provide the larger tax base for states, which probably subsidize more rural counties through incentives tied to certain rural activities, but making a blanket statement is probably not accurate.

          • Spooky23 a day ago

            Towns and counties produce revenue from property tax and sales tax.

            The infrastructure relies on state support, which is usually from Federal funds and personal income tax. That aid is a transfer payment from cities to localities. Bigger states, bigger transfer. Also, the federal funds are sourced from bigger states to the smaller states.

            Thats one of the amazing things about the US. The wealth of the coasts ensured that the smaller states weren’t left behind.

      • KittenInABox a day ago

        It's not like cities give their money to every suburban mom. It's like this:

        Suburbs cannot function without freeways, but the presence of freeways harm the property values of city neighborhoods not suburban ones.

        SFH simply produces less tax revenue than an entire apartment building by land, so any statewide social services (education, freeway maintenance...) is paid proportionately more by cities than by SFH.

        There are reports[0] of cities reporting that their SFH actually loses them money due to the fact they simply don't pay their fair share of taxes vs all the infrastructure they use.

        It's not like the government is going "oh boy, SFH mom, here's 500$ plucked straight from some inner city mom's payroll taxes". But in the broader system of supporting many people's living styles through greater societal infrastructure, less-dense housing like suburbs do not put out as much as they take.

        [0]https://static1.squarespace.com/static/53dd6676e4b0fedfbc26e... [Town of Nolensville, TN]

        • kbolino a day ago

          This feels more like a planning/governance problem than an innate property.

          I've lived in SFH on the edge of a major city and on the edge of farmland and there's a wide gulf in the level of infrastructure that they had access to, and also a significant difference in the amount of tax that was owed. It's hard for me to believe that those two very different scenarios are functionally equivalent.

          Moreover, vast swathes of the city I used to live next to, despite having significantly higher tax rates, were ultimately paying a lot less in tax due to severely depressed income levels and property values. There might have been a higher mean revenue per acre in the city as a whole, but there also was a much higher variance.

        • dsq 16 hours ago

          Aren't SFHs occupied more by high income tax brackets? That would balance out the property tax.

        • electronbeam a day ago

          The should raise the taxes to account for land size to make it fair

  • geodel a day ago

    From Google's perspective a lot of outsourced work is remote work. As its done away from Google offices. And they are doubling down on that.

  • rmbyrro a day ago

    Because they don't simply want you to perform tasks. They want to assimilate your mind and make it fully committed to a corporate cult. They can best accomplish this by having you spending most of your wake time in their corp kingdom.

    • shadowgovt a day ago

      Having been there: it's not that. It's that, unfortunately, they have enough hard numbers to know most people do their best work with a boss physically breathing down their neck.

      I knew some folks at Google who worked 100% remote and only came into the office for critical meetings about once a month. They had proven they could operate that way with a more-or-less stellar track record.

      • azangru a day ago

        > It's that, unfortunately, they have enough hard numbers to know most people do their best work with a boss physically breathing down their neck.

        While the conclusion — that most people do their best work when in the office — may be correct, why do you think that the cause of that is the boss breathing down people's necks rather than, say, more efficient collaboration among team members?

        My personal observations of my team over the past couple of years are that people are much more engaged, issues get resolved much quicker, and information radiates much better when team members are co-located. This is something that many were in agreement on before covid.

        • leksak 19 hours ago

          Not to mention how body language helps resolve so much surrounding tone when saying something in person. Telling someone to do a thing face-to-face can easily be neutrally charged. The same sentiment expressed in text can carry more weight - feel like an order and appear as if it is more urgent leading to stress

        • shadowgovt a day ago

          It may be more efficient collaboration among team members. The end-result is the same: more output for the same cost if people are congregating.

          > This is something that many were in agreement on before covid

          This is an excellent observation worth highlighting: Google's belief stems not just from pre-COVID / post-COVID observation but from the relative output of teams that were same-office colocated vs. inter-office located, necessitating videoconferencing, chat, and email to get work done. Now that you highlight that, I think my reasoning is in error and it's probably more about collaboration being easier in-person. But inconveniently for those who don't want to work in person, the end-result is the same.

scarface_74 a day ago

Hybrid is RTO. If I can’t live where I want to live and work from anywhere, it’s a non starter for me.

In my little neck of the woods - cloud consulting/professional services - Google is worse than Amazon where I just left last year.

AWS ProServe never had a RTO mandate and from former coworkers I’ve talked to, still doesn’t.

Google’s Cloud Consulting division does force a hybrid office schedule which is really dumb considering the work is both customer facing and requires a lot of travel

  • abadpoli a day ago

    > AWS ProServe never had a RTO mandate

    Before Covid, no team had an RTO mandate, so ProServe wasn’t really special here. In ProServe you were still expected to be in an office regularly, but it was just understood that you wouldn’t be in an Amazon office all the time because you’re likely at a client’s office instead.

    Post-covid, it’s mostly the same, although now even many clients aren’t requiring consultants to come in. But when they do, you’re expected to be there.

    • scarface_74 a day ago

      During the first wave of RTO and hybrid work, ProServe was exempted because it was considered “sales”. I was there then.

  • sitkack a day ago

    Well. Being tied to any one cloud is not a great position to be in. Not patronizing.

    • scarface_74 a day ago

      You’re always locked in to your infrastructure. The entire idea of “cloud agnosticism” is BS.

      I’ve seen companies take over a year and thousands of man hours to move from VMs on premise to a cloud platform.

      Cloud agnosticism is hardly ever a business differentiator

      • glzone1 a day ago

        It's also not an advantage, I've seen endless complexity in abstractions on abstraction, fragility and giving up really nice cloud features for this.

        It'd take years to migrate STILL even with all that effort. And they can't ship features they are so busy worrying about AWS going away.

        • woooooo a day ago

          Exception, companies like datadog where they're actually operating in several clouds for good business reasons (it's where their customers are).

stonethrowaway a day ago

If your company thinks this lowly of you, imagine what they think about the users.

alex_lav a day ago

_yet_

  • fortyseven a day ago

    I'm going to give benefit of the doubt that the headline was probably revised after submission. :(