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Remote work, outside the US [sucks?]

5 pointsby uptownhralmost 10 years ago
I&#x27;m a web developer, and for the longest time, I&#x27;ve dreamed about working remotely while traveling from country to country. Recently I went on a short vacation to china and attempted to work .<p>Now, I know China may be an exception but in my opinion, this is not a country a web developer can work remotely. You&#x27;re hands are tied behind your back with blind folds on. Internet through mobile is widely available, but speed is normally capped at edge speeds(56k). Then there&#x27;s the bigger problem of censorship. Google, facebook, twitter, and tons more are blocked.<p>VPN you say? Before, I left I did setup my own vpn server on Digital ocean and tested before leaving. Now, I need to investigate this further when I return but it is not 100%. I can&#x27;t say why, but I&#x27;ve ran into many connectivity issue trying to surf through the VPN. Having to deal with reconnecting and timing out a lot. Might be due to poor internet connectivity in general. Also on the mobile, I haven&#x27;t figured out how to tunnel traffic through VPN. Another thing I should research.<p>When internet is not fast, I do not feel like using it. As a developer, browsing, googling are things you do 90% of the time. More than coding.<p>How do you guys handle remote work in other countries with censorship and generally slow speeds?

4 comments

gorachel007almost 10 years ago
Working remotely from anywhere can be great, you just have to research the setup before you go and be prepared.<p>I&#x27;ve worked remotely from Oregon, Seattle, Singapore, Tokyo and Manila (where I am now). None of the cities except Manila caused any problems once you get around the time zone issue. The Internet in the Philippines is generally slow (averaging 1 mbps) and expensive. I&#x27;m not sure if this is due to infrastructure or a monopoly or something, but it&#x27;s tough to work with a slow, expensive connection especially when you&#x27;re a web developer.<p>I manage it by working late at night or early in the morning, when the connection seems to be faster (less people are awake and online). I also keep two different connections handy--one is my mobile data, which I can hotspot and use on my computer, and the other is a portable broadband device. That way, even if one of them loses connection (did I mention in addition to it being slow and expensive, the Internet is unreliable???) I can still work using the other one.<p>Even with the awful Internet I still get things done in Manila, and if it&#x27;s possible here it&#x27;s possible anywhere.
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mackenzielafferalmost 10 years ago
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wrdalmost 10 years ago
Internet is going to be spotty all over Asia unless you&#x27;re in South Korea. The only reliable trick I&#x27;ve found is to find a local coworking space that caters to the tech startup scene. Typically these spaces have good, reliable Internet.<p>Otherwise, to deal with the censorship and monitoring VPN is the way to go.