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Dylan_TMB t1_j2pcsj5 wrote

Remote jobs still seem healthy to me. I think you're more so noticing the hiring freezes for the lack of postings.

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blockchainwizz t1_j2pbsat wrote

My connections in corporate are all being instructed to work from home less too.

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[deleted] t1_j2scir9 wrote

After 3 years of remote work I believe remote work is inferior to in-person work

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shshmss t1_j2tyvxi wrote

I have noticed that too. Our company has asked the data science team to come to the office 2-3 times a week. We used to be fully remote since the pandemic.

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Dendriform1491 t1_j2pby8h wrote

The challenge of remote work is that a competent person capable of passing interviews can have 2 or more jobs simultaneously.

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race2tb t1_j2prusa wrote

If you do the job required in time, there is no reason this should be a problem for your manager. People can work remotely from the office as well. Just costing them time and money for nothing.

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haach80 t1_j2peh49 wrote

This is what worries me. Once employers catch on it's gonna mess it up for the people who need to work from home (older engineers who have kids and maybe health issues who are really benefitting from saving on the commute).

There is already a huge community of developers doing this : https://www.reddit.com/r/overemployed

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Dendriform1491 t1_j2pfbq6 wrote

Being in an office is your "mutex lock". Once you remove that lock, you can have multiple jobs, unless you are based enough to work a second job from an office.

Personally I would not do it, but there are perverse incentives to do it and that is a predictor that people will do it.

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mr_birrd t1_j2s38gv wrote

Which will lead to ultra high taxes in europe and is even legal in some(if you work both 100% without the other noticing). I don't see a problem, nearly noone would do that where I live, free time > money (at least knowing that the income from one ML job is probably quite enough).

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