Yeah, I can see in those specific situations. Cost of living tends to be high in areas with a lot of technology jobs though so I don’t know.
I’m not those people so I can’t speak for them.
Comment on Bernie Sanders Champions 32-Hour Work Week With No Loss in Pay
JohnDClay@sh.itjust.works 1 year agoYeah not for everyone. I’m thinking higher paying areas like technology and programming where pay is high but people are getting really burned out.
Yeah, I can see in those specific situations. Cost of living tends to be high in areas with a lot of technology jobs though so I don’t know.
I’m not those people so I can’t speak for them.
curiousaur@reddthat.com 1 year ago
I’m a programmer, and it’s very different from hourly work. Realistically, any programmer is coding for like 1-2 hours a day. There are meetings so we understand the problem we have to solve, and a lot of time thinking through the problems and architecture solutions. We’re not sitting there typing for 8 hours a day, or at least those are the ones getting burned out. Realistically I’m working like 30 hours a week already, with only 10 hours being real coding, the rest being talking, researching, learning, and pondering. Maybe I’m lucky I work somewhere that that stuff isn’t seen as slacking.
Nemo@midwest.social 1 year ago
Ugh. I once did some independent programming and the guy insisted I do it in front of him because it involved his proprietary data. So much griping about the time I spent looking at documentation or referring to coding assistance sites like Stack Overflow. I quit on day two.