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by muratk
2318 days ago
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Ah, my point with the internet example wasn't the missing internet itself. In an office, someone will fix it if the internet is down. That's why you have an office: to outsource infra to people so you can focus on your own job: writing, coding, whatever it is. If you're remote, your internet being down is _your_ problem and you're expected to figure it out. You have more responsibility—and that was an unexpected part of working remotely for some people. |
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If the company REALLY wants that to be my responsibility, they can pay for me to run a 2nd ISP line, or any other myriad potential solutions.
Even in-office, most places don't run backup ISP connections, the internet goes it, it goes out.