问HN:你如何验证一个短期租赁是否适合远程办公?

1作者: travelingbder68 个月前原帖
在过去的几年里,我一直在旅行中远程工作,主要住在Airbnb。<p>最大的一个持续性问题是什么呢?<br>就是尝试弄清楚一个地方是否真的有一个合适的工作空间。房东们常常标注“专用工作空间”,但这可能意味着:<p>- 一个厨房吧台椅<p>- 床尾的折叠椅<p>- 或者在某个情况下……一个熨衣板<p>作为一个喜欢在Airbnb里工作的独自旅行者(而不是在共享办公空间或咖啡馆),我花了几个小时浏览房源,放大照片,给房东发消息,只为确保椅子不是塑料的,还有一张我可以坐上六个小时以上的桌子。<p>所以我很好奇:<p>你们在预订之前是如何筛选这些信息的?<p>你们会选择酒店吗?使用其他平台?有什么过滤的小窍门吗?<p>你遇到过最糟糕或最具误导性的“工作空间”设置是什么?<p>我很想听听你们的策略,努力深入了解其他远程工作者是如何应对这个问题的。
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I’ve been working remotely while traveling solo for the last couple of years mostly staying in Airbnbs.<p>The biggest consistent friction? Trying to figure out if a place actually has a real workspace. Hosts often mark “dedicated workspace,” but that could mean:<p>- a kitchen barstool<p>- a folding chair at the end of the bed<p>- or in one case… an ironing board<p>As a solo traveler who prefers working from the Airbnb itself (vs co-working or cafes), I’ve spent hours scanning listings, zooming into photos, and messaging hosts, just to make sure the chair isn’t plastic and there’s a table I can sit at for 6+ hours.<p>So I’m curious:<p>How do you vet this before booking?<p>Do you stick to hotels? Use other platforms? Any filtering hacks?<p>What’s the worst or most misleading “workspace” setup you’ve encountered?<p>Would love to hear your tactics, trying to deeply understand how other remote workers navigate this.