this post was submitted on 18 May 2026
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[โ€“] NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip 2 points 4 days ago (1 children)

We did. Projects move ahead faster, problems got solved quicker, problems went down.

Frankly, it was never remote working per se, it was embracing the elements that make it work: asynchronous work. Documenting EVERYTHING, completely open infrastructure (everyone can see what everyone is doing/working on), requiring dedicated YOU do this tasks, assignments etc.

But from then on, we didn't need an office anymore. We don't even need regularly scheduled hours for everyone, what ever works for them is fine. I think that gives people opportunity to do things when they like, and without the commute there is a lot more actually doing the work when they are there.

[โ€“] bryndos@fedia.io 1 points 3 days ago

Individual worker / team / prod line. Sure you can measure those. That's great for those at thst level.. But I don't know how you add them up across the whole of "America" without some very dubious economic statistics bullshit.

Empirically , economy wide measures are generally useless i reckon. And often manipulated. It's very hard to add up output of different production lines (or different goods or services) in a single meaningful measure and account for all the variables like quality, product mix, availability and if you're using price-weights all stuff that distorts market power. Econo-statisticians will calculate it, because they get paid to, but the honest/aware ones should fess up it's got serious weaknesses however you calculate it.