I'd love to have a job where I get paid to work with excel the whole day. Not kidding.
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It's pretty dope, especially when you get to work from home. I'm usually in my pajamas snuggled under a blanket. Much comfier than dress pants in a cubicle.
WFH is my goal, already doing the excel, company I'm in is really relaxed, so can't complain, but WFH would be nice
I never got why people love working from home so much. Home has so many distractions like my PC, my phone, my fridge, etc.
It also helps to just physically seperate my work from my free time. My home is my fortress where no work shall ever be done, a place for resting and wanking.
Also, work was like 90% of my social interaction and the pandemic really did a number on me.
In a cruel twist of fate, I now work almost exclusively from home, a dream for others, a dread for me.
I waste just as much time on my phone at work that I do at home, but at home I'm able to freely seek out a distraction when I need a break, and devote my attention to it until I've got some motivation again, then get back to work. In the office I have to try taking a break covertly when I need one, which doesn't lower my stress very much, and leads to me taking even longer breaks trying to regain my motivation.
As for separating work and free time, I have no issue stepping away at the end of my shift; I only work for money - I don't give a shit about the company itself - so, as soon as I'm no longer counting the time toward my paycheck, any and all motivation to continue working immediately evaporates.
A lot of people seem to really need social interaction, which definitely seems to be the biggest reason they might not enjoy long-term work from home. I seem to be the exception to that. During the height of the pandemic even my most extroverted friends eventually started craving social interactions, but I would stock up at Costco and go literal months without ever once leaving my house, and I loved it.
Have you tried walking to and from work every day? It can help you pretend they are different places.
You wake up and do your morning routine, then you walk around the block and start your working day when you reach your home office. Then at the end of the day walk around the block and home to mark the end of your work day.
It's not even the dress pants in cubicle. For 8 years I was working in factories on the production floor. This included heavy industry, night shifts, dust, noise, blinding lights, near freezing temperatures and a real threat of loosing an appendage. Now I'm working from home, sterling at an Excell sheet in my pajamas, under a blanket.
Doing excel for 9 hours straight is far better than breathing toxic gases inside a damp,badly lit coal mines tho. Juste saying...
Yes of course and eating trash is better than eating shit
What I mean is that work conditions have vastly improved compared to the last century (thanks to unions). It may be miserable yes but it's a far cry from the horrible work that our ancestors were forced to endure starting from a young age.
I get what you mean. Ofc class struggle has brought us many concessions, technology progresses over time and the industrialized countries add more and more abstraction layers to manual work.
My point would be that we do have to view the working conditions relative to what's possible at the given time. Given the resources humanity has today, fully automated luxury (queer) space communism is within realistic reach!
It's a similar answer as to world hunger: it's a systematic distribution - not resource - problem. That being artificially created scarcity thanks to a profit and greed driven economic base (capitalism) and inequitable/inefficient allocation of resources (markets)
I can only agree
Is it tho?
Depends on the trash. Depends on the shit.
I suppose that is the 3 largest domino.
Why not automate stuff? Do enough janky shit with excel functions and macros so you get everything you need from copying data into a worksheet.
Then you're only getting more work, not more free time, for the same wage
See that's where a lot of people go wrong
Automate what you can but don't tell anyone and don't turn it in any faster
Make your deadlines and be one with the chill
Then you have to play the look busy game if you're in an office
Some people excel at that.
With the new free time you'll be getting you'll have plenty of time to practice
Then you're doing it wrong. If you're good at automation you can get promoted readily.
But hey if you hate Excel that much why not find another type of work. Be a carpenter. Be a tour guide. No one is forcing you to work an Excel-only office job.
Automate by hiring others.
It would be nice to have that kind of job security
Well it's either that or you design something like a "Jump To Conclusions" mat
Today I received a meeting invitation from the CTO (this doesn't usually happen, I am getting dragged into a mud trap), the agenda for the meeting is "Plan to prepare for the preparation..." and my contribution to that meeting is to come prepared with a timeline of the plan. I am not even kidding.
I used to work for a 2 billion dollar company and when we meet with the CEO, we have a week's worth of planning meetings. Such a waste of time.
I hope you did some work in preparation of this meeting
At the pearly gates.. what did you accomplish in life?
Uh I excelled 9 hours a day for 40 years.
Great, come on in!
I somehow managed to avoid excel my entire life, and I'll be so lost whenever using it is actually going to be required of me
Get on Google sheets or something to stay organized... Learn how to use index match and how to nest formulas (e.g. countifs, sumifs).
It's incredibly frustrating when someone at work can't navigate an excel file or a spreadsheet.
I love google sheets. I made some nifty little functions in it. Then I discovered appscript and things got a little weird. I made an automated CRM system. An automailer. An animated dancing badger made by changing the colours of the cells. It gets a bit hazy after that.
It's incredibly frustrating when someone at work can't navigate an excel file or a spreadsheet.
Oh, I know the feeling, be it in other areas.
๐ฌ I moved from a restaurant job to an office and live on Excel now. I have probably not used it for 10 years before this. I'm beginner level for sure. Any suggestions on how to improve quickly?
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://piped.video/@LeilaGharani?feature=shared
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I'm open-source; check me out at GitHub.
The last block will be "Prompt Writing/Engineering"
I personally feel attacked.
Yeah. What about those of use who are in Google Sheets 9 hours a day? Fuck OP.
I'm sorry, how could I forget? smh ๐
Hey, This is lemmy! You gotta include the open source ones too like OpenOffice and LibraOffice That might fly in other platforms but not lemmy
Lmao, I don't think they enjoy whidespread corporate usage tho. Also Excel is pretty much a synonym for spreadsheets in general at this point
Sorry to hear that... Maybe join a union and/or socialist party/org in your area to bring about change?
It's ok if you don't have the energy/motivation for that though... maybe just spread the word that a better world, where the economy is democratically controlled and owned by the public, is possible?
Trades are always hiring. My phone says I walk like 5 miles a day just working in our factory. I use my brain, body, problem-solving skills, and have real conversations with my coworkers daily about how to go about the work and solve problems, or just pass the time when we're not as busy. I learn new things constantly and enjoy working with my hands and making my work look beautiful, which can be surprisingly deep in the field of industrial electrical work.
Just know that if anyone's interested in this kinda thing, make sure you have some thick skin and maybe leave a terminally online brain at home
Which trade are you in?
I'm gonna guess industrial electrical work
Yes. Specifically industrial control and automation, which is apples to oranges to commercial and industrial building power distribution for example.
I worked for GE as a grunt first building inverters for solar fields and power plants. Then I did field service for them in the American southwest when they shut down the factory and sent all the work to GE Germany and Japan.
Then when all of the re-work we were doing was done, I passed on traveling indefinitely and came back home to Pittsburgh. I got hired opening a new factory for a company that makes machinery used for plastics recycling and worked there for close to a decade as their only electrical technician. That shop holds a deep place in my heart for the connections and friendships I made there. But I saw us getting slow as fuck and everyone quitting and decided to switch jobs this year for a better paycheck and closer commute. Now I work solely in testing and do a bit of design work and drafting.
I love me some excel formulas! Makes me hot and bothered!