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author | Ngô Ngọc Đức Huy <huyngo@disroot.org> | 2022-10-16 23:24:37 +0700 |
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committer | Ngô Ngọc Đức Huy <huyngo@disroot.org> | 2022-10-16 23:24:37 +0700 |
commit | cc75231378b098cbc65509cc4ad81a2a5233f97b (patch) | |
tree | 9e6fb5a2895adefbe2185aa01d4218f520f4e858 /content | |
parent | cfc927cf78a874b1cbd38c8b4fedc0ad2ee6a1ba (diff) | |
download | blog-cc75231378b098cbc65509cc4ad81a2a5233f97b.tar.gz |
Add post against remote work
Diffstat (limited to 'content')
-rw-r--r-- | content/posts/2022-10-15-remote-work.md | 158 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | content/works.md | 9 |
2 files changed, 165 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/content/posts/2022-10-15-remote-work.md b/content/posts/2022-10-15-remote-work.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c2c368d --- /dev/null +++ b/content/posts/2022-10-15-remote-work.md @@ -0,0 +1,158 @@ +--- +title: "Why I prefer remote work" +date: 2022-10-15 +lang: en +categories: [ blog ] +tags: [work, remote] +translationKey: "2022-10-15-remote-work" +--- + +Having both worked in office and remotely (aka working from home), I find +myself preferring the latter much more. In this post, I will detail on how +much the benefits of remote work mean to me as well as why I don't view its +drawbacks much of problems. + +## Pros + +### No need to commute + +"No need to commute" doesn't sound much; "no need to commute in congestion" +would be more telling about the advantage of remote work. Most jobs +start and end at around the same time windows and as a result, we have a thing +called "rush hours", where we have abnormally high number of people being +outside on the road. By simply not having to go outside around these time, I +would save up to 3 hours a day! Being stuck around a bunch of cars also +contribute to my daily stress. Even when I don't have to travel during these +time windows, it would still take me half that time, as most tech companies in +my city are located around that place. + +Not only do I save time, I also save fuel, thereby saving more money as well as +reducing gasoline consumption and pollution. By working from home, I would +save more than 3 L of gasoline and avoid exhausting 4 m<sup>3</sup> of +CO<sub>2</sub> per week. Speaking of exhaustion, breathing it continuously in +high concentration for 3 hours a day is not exactly healthy. + +The saved time and money can be spent on more meaningful things, such as doing +daily workouts or sleeping a bit more, both of which I am lacking. This means +that remote work is the only way for me to live healthily. + +### More freedom overall + +When I work at home, I can wear whatever I want and no one is gonna judge it. +Some workplaces require strict dress code like tugged button-up shirts and +shoes. Fortunately, I never worked in a workplace like that, but I am still +required to wear uniform on Monday and employee card. There are also implicit +dress codes like no slip-slops, shorts or sleeveless shirts in the office, +which is no problem if you're at home. There are also no surveillance camera, +(unless you're not already covering your laptop's). + +I can slack off from time to time: I can do small talk with friends and read +new updates from my RSS feed without disapproval eyes from other +coworkers---not that this is strictly forbidden, but some people seems to have +this weird idea that you have to spend 100% of your time to work. Well, you +can't constantly focus for 4 hours long; at least people I know of don't have +such attention span. Temporary procrastination can actually help with +productivity. + +### Higher focus + +While some people complain about constant distractions from home working, my +experience is on the contrary. +Each job differs from another, but in one of my job, my coworkers constantly +need to ask me for help. +By distancing myself from my coworkers constantly asking for support, I can +actually focus on my work. +This also means that I cannot ask others instantly, but I also find that not +being able to do that force me to figure out the problems myself, which in +effect help me understand the issue more profoundly. + +### Less land required + +If you're working remotely, you won't use that 3 m<sup>2</sup> office lot and a +parking lot (assuming you're not using public transport). If your entire +company work remotely, you won't need a whole building. Well, you probably +still need some office somehow, but from an employer's point of view, shouldn't +this be a tremendous advantage? + +## Cons + +### Under-communication + +As many people point out, it can be hard to communicate when you're working +remotely. This is very true at the beginning of the forced remote-work (i.e. +the COVID pandemic). Since then, video conferencing and other communication +methods have improved, but network failure is a problem that always persist. +Nonetheless, as I mentioned above, low and unintrusive communication can be and +advantage. + +### Over-communication + +To address the above problem, some people resort to over-communicate. We have +daily meetings, weekly meetings, fortnightly meetings, monthly meetings---you +name it---that are supposed to be 5-minute sync, but can creep up to an hour or +even more. This is not to mention random checkup meetings for some urgency. +This is the very same problem that would happens with in-office working that I +mentioned [above](higher-focus). + +### Work-life balance + +Over-communication can in turn lead to work-life imbalance. + +There is a reason many people have a self-policy of not bringing work home. +This includes not working at home and not discussing work at home. I am such +person. Learning from my past internship, I know how distressing being +contacted from work can be[^0], so I don't install any work-related apps on my +own devices, and if I do, the notification is always turned off. + +Nonetheless, some people seem to have this notion that as you *can* do work +outside your working time, you *should* (or worse, *have to*) do it. I had a +coworker who brought her laptop home. Yes she did work at home in the evening, +and when the temporary remote work period ended, she still kept that habit, +even went so far as checking messages/doing meeting on her train. Now, I'm no +one to judge her work-life boundaries, but it's extremely annoying that she +expected me to be able to contact in some way outside my working time. + +Of course, if you have clear boundaries and principles, this shouldn't be a +problem. + +### Security + +Network are not to be trusted, especially when it goes out of your local one. +From an employer's standpoint, remote work can be undesirable because a +malicious employee can leak data to an opponent, which is a valid concerns, +except that, they're using cloud services to host their data, communication, +and even software substitution. They're already sending data outside to a +third party! Not to mention that, there are already plenty of ways to send +information out of the office without network, such as copying files to an USB, +paper, or just remembering the information. + +On that note, blocking internet in a software development environment, unless +you're developing internal software and host your own servers, software and +documentation, which include, but not limited to: + +- compilers +- operating systems +- software package mirrors +- language and libraries documentation +- version control server +- database servers +- email servers +- instant messaging servers + +that are required in doing software development, or other kind of office works, +because as soon as you leak data to the external internet, that false shield +has been broken. Well, disclaimer, I'm not a security expert. + +## Some thoughts + +No, I don't think remote work is for everyone, but I insist that allowing it +is a must. Obviously, there are jobs where remote work doesn't make sense, but +for me particularly, remote work is a step forwards in maintaining a healthy +mind (well, at least if you're already principled enough not to bring work +home) as well as contributing to environment preservation. If I'm to found +a company, I'd encourage my coworkers to work from home, because I believe +that's a win for both parties. + +[^0]: While I wasn't *directly* contacted during my internship, I was in a + chat group at work, and them constantly discussing work even after midnight + gives me unintended pressure. diff --git a/content/works.md b/content/works.md index 56c5e46..f4445fe 100644 --- a/content/works.md +++ b/content/works.md @@ -10,6 +10,8 @@ Consider this my informal portfolio. My projects can be found on For a more formal one, see my CV in PDF format [here][cv]. +[cv]: https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Huy-Ngo/my-cv/master/huy-cv.pdf + ## Expectation ### Things I can offer @@ -31,16 +33,19 @@ overtime. Other than that, these are nice things to have: - well-documented codebase and installation instruction - company hardware -- fully remote work with occasional hanging out onsite +- fully [remote work][remote] with occasional hanging out onsite - letting me work for slightly less than full-time (e.g. 4 days per week) +[remote]: /posts/2022-10-15-remote-work/ + ### Things I'm not interested in I would likely refuse the offer if it's about: - tracking people for analytics, whether online or offline - cryptocurrencies, NFTs, blockchains... -- "cloud-native" software +- "serverless", "cloud-native" software (an actually serverless program where + alternatives are traditionally server-based, such as SQLite, might interest me) I also find the following repulsive: |