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How to Work Remotely and Still Be the Best

48 点作者 crm416将近 12 年前

6 条评论

area51org将近 12 年前
I think these are all good suggestions, although there&#x27;s actually a danger in trying to employ too many tools (especially in an enterprise, where you&#x27;re probably more likely to encounter less-skilled technologists who may be frightened by such an array of apps).<p>The biggest key, in my experience: find basic, reliable ways to communicate, standardize on them, and use them consistently. The biggest problems in remote work always seem to stem from people going invisible: no communication, no signs of work being done.<p>One tool that the OP doesn&#x27;t mention, but should be a staple among companies of all sizes: Google Hangouts. You can make a permanent hangout using Google Calendar (search for this and you&#x27;ll find how-tos). It&#x27;s like a clubhouse, and it&#x27;s really good for quick chats as well as full-on multi-person meetings.<p>For pairing, my team has been using a combination of Hangouts with tmux, which is an app similar to GNU Screen, but with next-generation features. (E.g.: when you split a window, or change to another one, everyone in the session sees it! Simpler configuration, too.)<p>We&#x27;ve found that this simple combination of live video chat with multi-user terminal access is actually <i>better</i> than working together in person. Both people can communicate easily, and no one has to move out of the way of the keyboard. :-)<p>edit: wording
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jroseattle将近 12 年前
Working remotely is not an easy job to do well. It requires great communication skills and the ability to translate and interpret words into actionable tasks.<p>Having done this for a while, there&#x27;s a big thing that anyone who works remotely needs to understand: the biggest presumption those on the other end have about you is that you&#x27;re not working when you&#x27;re not on a call or communicating. It&#x27;s nothing personal, it&#x27;s just the nature of being remote.<p>There is only one real thing that addresses this presumption: output. Deliver on promises, and deliver great work. All the tools in the world can assist you and your teams in being productive, but the real value is when you produce.
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porker将近 12 年前
I freelance for a number of companies (both one-off and recurring clients) and I can&#x27;t find an issue&#x2F;bug tracker and PM tool that works when switching between multiple projects.<p>Ideally simple enough that the client can file feature requests, discussions can happen and they can provide feedback, yet comprehensive enough that I can prioritise items, tie VCS commits to them etc.<p>Basecamp isn&#x27;t any good for technical projects (or structured enough); I&#x27;ve trialled Planscope with a price-conscious client and it worked well (but isn&#x27;t a bug tracker as the Author says). Lighthouseapp, PivotalTracker, both good but neither encompass the whole project lifecycle that a freelancer has to deal with.<p>Because we don&#x27;t need a bug tracker like an in-house development team, or a project estimation tool like a sales team, or a client management system like an account manager, or a project maangement system like... you get my point. <i>We need them all</i>.<p>I&#x27;ve also decided after 10 years freelancing the tool needs a Gantt-esque view, so clients can visually appreciate the impact of delaying the project at a certain point by X days, or adding a new feature. It won&#x27;t be an accurate time-chart in reality, but they need to see the impact of changes to realise it&#x27;s not worth making them.<p>With the number of tools out there I&#x27;m convinced something must match. What am I using? Google Spreadsheets with a large client (relatively successful, save for the discussions... ouch); Another client insists on long email threads (got to find something better). And I&#x27;m doing less work and managing more overhead the whole time, with no clear system to tell me what&#x27;s Important&#x2F;Urgent across all my clients.<p>To those of you who have solved this already: Please tell me how!
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alphakappa将近 12 年前
I find that the biggest downside for working from home is my posture. I don&#x27;t have a dedicated office setup at home (small apartment), and therefore end up working from the bed&#x2F;couch. Within an hour I&#x27;m slouching or sitting in a terrible posture which is not really great for working for a long period of time.<p>Does anyone have a recommendation for a chair (not an office chair, but something that can otherwise be part of the home furniture) that is convenient for sitting and using a laptop for long periods of time?
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qwerta将近 12 年前
Working remotely requires some investments: dedicated room for office, good chair, conference set. Most people just try to code on sofa at living room, and fail.
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Buzaga将近 12 年前
isn&#x27;t that a weird title for praising remote working?