Submitted by snowmaninheat t3_11cyu1y in nottheonion
Arronax50 t1_ja7ea64 wrote
Reply to comment by caananball in Google lays off 100 robot workers used to clean its cafeterias, says report by snowmaninheat
It's called "hot desking" and almost every big company in France uses it. I thought it was common in the USA as well.
[deleted] t1_ja8avsx wrote
[removed]
JejuneEsculenta t1_ja9tzhh wrote
My company had set up hot desks, while working to transition our office around some RIFs and incoming tenants.
Eventually, they just let us all WFH and closed the office (which we had only built, like, 18 years ago).
Hot desks are brilliant for those who are in the office part time. No need to keep 150 desks for 150 employees, and have them each only used a day or two per week.
Nopengnogain t1_jaaflfj wrote
It is common, at least where I work, it’s actually less crowded. I used to share an office with someone else, but now that most of us are teleworking, on the days I do go in, I reserve a desk and get the whole office all by myself.
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