The device discussion is really interesting on so many levels. Especially for non-phones and remote working.<p>Let's say you live in a studio apartment and you have your own personal workstation set up how you like it. That would be a desktop workstation, couple of monitors, adjustable standing desk, some chair that you like, internet, etc..<p>Now a company wants to hire you and they want you to use a company issued laptop. This becomes a serious physical burden on both yourself and your limited space. Using a laptop without external monitors is horrible posture but if you're in a studio apartment you might not have enough space to use a completely separate desk, chair, couple of monitors, keyboard, mouse, etc.. We'll ignore the money aspect of having 2 distinct set ups which in the grand scheme of things isn't too big of a deal.<p>There's not too many reasonable options here. The company's policy might not allow you to bring your own device and even if they let you use your personal computer, allowing them to audit that or install some remote desktop sharing software that they have free reign over would be total madness.<p>It's also not that painless to quickly switch around HDMI (or even worse DVI) monitor cables. I suppose you could rig some type of HUB that lets you flip a switch to control which computer your monitors, keyboard, mouse, headphones, microphone, etc. are active for. This way you can use your desk setup for both, but now you can't use them at the same time which has its own set of issues. There's also issues like wanting to copy files from your personal machine to the work machine. So you might think ok I'll just allow SSH connections locally but now you've linked both machines to a point where having separation is useless, or maybe you decide to use an external drive that you can swap between both. In either case the work machine has been tainted.