For anyone wondering the shift is real. There are literally no remote jobs. I have one interview next week for a job in the bay area where they want me 3 days a week. I live 5 hours away.
There are remote jobs, but they might only last you 6 months, because they are most likely shifting staff to Poland and they might as well get you to refactor some horrible project nobody wants to touch. And even then, these jobs are extremely hard to get, 1/10000 odds.
cebert · 7h ago
What’s your game plan? If you get this job in the Bay, will you relocate?
cebert · 8h ago
Uber is clearly indicating that they want employees in the office for “collaboration.” If you’re an employee who prefers this type of working environment, great! Otherwise, it’s time to find another position. Fighting your employer won’t work. I, too, prefer working from home because I have a private office at home instead of an open office at work. However, given the current market, I won’t fight my employer. I’ll begrudgingly go to the office three days a week to “collaborate” so that the leaders in private offices are happy.
fracus · 7h ago
The employees are indicating they don't want to return the office. It doesn't seem to be a great idea for the company to force something they really don't want. It will create a situation where both sides are looking for a way out at the first opportunity. Of course, that may be what Uber wants. To trim its workforce passively.
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dickersnoodle · 7h ago
Same, and while I do it I'll be looking for another job where management isn't suffering from cranial-rectal inversion.
yehbuttzlivin · 7h ago
It’s just agency control. Force memorization of a routine that serves Uber.
Show you can layoff all these developers without the universe folding in on itself as a flex.
It’s sad and pathetic fiat decree. But low skilled lazy office workers who refuse to learn trades love having their choker collar yanked.
sgnelson · 7h ago
There's something incredibly ironic to me about Uber staff fighting a return to office mandate, given that the actual laborers for uber don't have a work from home option what so ever. (also, do uber workers who have gotten used to working from home then take uber to their office?)
There are remote jobs, but they might only last you 6 months, because they are most likely shifting staff to Poland and they might as well get you to refactor some horrible project nobody wants to touch. And even then, these jobs are extremely hard to get, 1/10000 odds.
No comments yet
Fostering as sense of worker insecurity so the workers stay put is an old tactic: https://www.nytimes.com/1997/02/27/business/job-insecurity-o...
Show you can layoff all these developers without the universe folding in on itself as a flex.
It’s sad and pathetic fiat decree. But low skilled lazy office workers who refuse to learn trades love having their choker collar yanked.