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With the population exploding and space to build new houses growing ever so scarcely I can not imagine a long-term future in which working from home would be profitable. Instead of working from home, living at work seems to be the more logical step forward.

Personally I'd prefer living at a shared-workspace or company campus as long as work and living facilities are clearly separate.



> Personally I'd prefer living at a shared-workspace or company campus as long as work and living facilities are clearly separate.

May I ask why? I'd prefer living close to my family and friends, many of which may not work for the same company as I work for. I'm trying to see what your motivating factors are because I, for one, could not disagree more.


A shared-workspace campus for you and your friends would work out then? You can picture it as a shared-workspace town if that is more appealing to you. Living quarters, parks, etc. on one side of the highway. A shared-workspace campus hosting multiple companies/teams on the other. Living and working stays strictly separate, everyone has a short commute and you still have all project members available on-site at the same time to reliably work together and gasp actually meet up when required.

To answer your question, I do not want to bring work into my home. BYOD resolves most of the factors that would make me want to provide my own office at home.

May I ask how you currently manage to live close to your family and friends and (because I have to assume you are surrounded by like-minded individuals) their families and their friends and so on? Frankly, I find this very unrealistic, but maybe that's because my friends and family are spread out across the globe.


> Frankly, I find this very unrealistic, but maybe that's because my friends and family are spread out across the globe.

I make very conscious decisions to work and live close to my family (Southern California). It's not unrealistic at all. In fact, having a solid social support system is by far more important (for mental as well as physical health) than making (slightly more) money in the Bay.


BYOD resolves most of the factors that would make me want to provide my own office at home.

If you’re reasonably happy with open-plan offices, that might be true. If you’re not... there seem to be few alternatives nowadays.


>space to build new houses growing ever so scarcely

If you are talking about the US, I think you are neglecting to take into account the hundreds of millions of square acreage between the coasts.


I guess there was some Swiss bias in what I wrote. Apologies for living in a tiny country.


We treat the US like it's a tiny country and require the population to live in small areas around the coasts. It's the craziest thing.

https://demographics.virginia.edu/DotMap/


Yeah, it's called peonage.





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