Office? No thank you! Remote work is here to outlive us
With a stable and constantly growing percentage, remote working will mark a change on a global level.
With a stable and constantly growing percentage, remote working will mark a change on a global level.
If you want to know the real interests against remote work, look no further: just think of empty offices.
Worker fired after remote monitoring of her keyboard, complaint dismissed. She looks filthy, but it's a nightmare.
Working from home and fertility: a link that favors families and can reverse the decline in births
The folding desk, made in New Zealand, offers a sustainable and practical alternative for those who work remotely but restless about the symbolic value.
The pandemic, even in the crisis, has tried to teach us something about remote work: perhaps we have not learned it, but the opportunities remain intact.
For us. For our companies. For the planet. It's not an opportunity: the four-day workweek is a necessity.
Spain leads the way in Europe with a really interesting law for digital nomads. I expect a lot of movement there.
The Yolo Economy and teleworking are also starting to break through in the Rising Sun, a land of inked stamps and timeless faxes.
Bali is ready to transform its reception system: the Indonesian island focuses on more permanent presences and 'caresses' digital nomads. Are you ready to work in a paradise?