I've worked from home every single day since I graduated from college 6 years ago.<p>My first job was as a one-man team managing a webapp for a local insurance adjusting company. I lucked into working remotely, as they didn't have a central office, so working from home was required.<p>My second job was working for AOL/Netscape under Jason Calacanis, and due to his experience with hiring remote employees for Weblogs, Inc., the idea of working remotely was not foreign to him or his other employees, who all worked remotely as well.<p>The same situation applied to my third job - Mahalo, working for Jason again, although since I left there a few years ago, they've transitioned to having all of the developers work on-site.<p>Now I'm back at AOL again, hired by someone I worked with the last time around, who himself was working remotely in the Orlando area until AOL opened an office there.<p>At this point, the ability to work from home is #1 or #2 on my list of qualifications for a job - I gain all of the time that would be lost commuting, my job market is much bigger than people who have to work on-site, and I greatly enjoy working in the office that I custom-built for myself (seend here <a href="http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=2146210" rel="nofollow">http://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=2146210</a>).