kilteer
kilteer t1_iywcipp wrote
Reply to comment by WendellVaughn_Quasar in Why are houses in Randolph so cheap? by Clementine823
Based on the arm shape of Cape Cod, yes, I could see that being an armpit.
Worcester is off-center and smells odd. (whether off-center in the state or to the side of Boston being the Hub/center)
kilteer t1_iyvkzrn wrote
Reply to comment by jimcreighton12 in Why are houses in Randolph so cheap? by Clementine823
Man, I am so glad that Worcester is the armpit.
kilteer t1_iyvktzw wrote
Reply to comment by NativeMasshole in Why are houses in Randolph so cheap? by Clementine823
That actually sounds cheaper than Brockton.
kilteer t1_itrvxxl wrote
Reply to Been seeing this sticker on cars all over the Boston area this year. What is it? by blueberry1997
Oh buoy, we're in deep water now.
kilteer t1_irn2oey wrote
Reply to comment by BannedMyName in King Richard's fair is "at capacity" anyone else who got turned away wanna meet up somewhere and do something? by Bane523
I heard that was going to a small event.
kilteer t1_jdmoowe wrote
Reply to How common was remote/hybrid work ,before COVID, in Boston? by Mei_Flower1996
It really depends upon the job role and industry. I work in tech, which is one of the easier areas to allow for remote work.
I have been at least hybrid for the past 15 years (2-3 days remote per week). I've been fully remote for the past 5 years.
For me, I work with cloud providers (AWS & Azure), so if I commute for 1-1.5 hours into the city to be at the office, I am still working remotely from the environment I am supporting. My employer recognizes that it makes more sense to save 2-3 hours per day for me to work from home.
Not everyone has this luxury though. I am very lucky with the companies I have worked at to allow this situation.