10-second walk down my hallway to my computer.
Ask Lemmy
A Fediverse community for open-ended, thought provoking questions
Please don't post about US Politics. If you need to do this, try !politicaldiscussion
Rules: (interactive)
1) Be nice and; have fun
Doxxing, trolling, sealioning, racism, and toxicity are not welcomed in AskLemmy. Remember what your mother said: if you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all. In addition, the site-wide Lemmy.world terms of service also apply here. Please familiarize yourself with them
2) All posts must end with a '?'
This is sort of like Jeopardy. Please phrase all post titles in the form of a proper question ending with ?
3) No spam
Please do not flood the community with nonsense. Actual suspected spammers will be banned on site. No astroturfing.
4) NSFW is okay, within reason
Just remember to tag posts with either a content warning or a [NSFW] tag. Overtly sexual posts are not allowed, please direct them to either !asklemmyafterdark@lemmy.world or !asklemmynsfw@lemmynsfw.com.
NSFW comments should be restricted to posts tagged [NSFW].
5) This is not a support community.
It is not a place for 'how do I?', type questions.
If you have any questions regarding the site itself or would like to report a community, please direct them to Lemmy.world Support or email info@lemmy.world. For other questions check our partnered communities list, or use the search function.
Reminder: The terms of service apply here too.
Partnered Communities:
Logo design credit goes to: tubbadu
Same. When I have an appointment with a costumer: usual a combination of private car, train and rental to reach the destination
Morning: walk 5 km uphill in the snow. Evening: walk 5 km further uphill in the snow to my second house. Next morning: walk 5 km even further uphill to my next place of work
...and so on until the weekend where I walk 50km back down the mountain to my first house, in the snow.
4 years back it was a walk to the station and a half hour train ride.
Now I walk downstairs after waking up at 9:30.
I live in a medium sized city (~95k) in Europe. It takes me around 15 minutes by bike to get to work.
A 30 minute walk across the city center
Pre-pandemic I drove 15 minutes to the BART station, hopefully got parking. Walked 5 minutes to the train platform. Waited for train. 50ish minute train ride to downtown San Francisco. 10 minute walk to office. Pretty typical Bay Area commute.
Now, I take my dogs for a walk, get back home, make coffee, relax. Go upstairs and login to work. WFH is the new normal and it’s great.
50 min feels pretty long. How crowded is BART usually?
Where I got on, not too bad, I usually got a seat, but it quickly got crowded. Nowadays I hear it’s better; ridership hasn’t returned to pre-pandemic levels yet.
I live in a small town near Amsterdam and work twice a week in the office in Amsterdam.
My commute is:
- 3 minutes walk to train station
- 24 minutes train ride
- 12 minutes bike ride
What's the bike situation? Do you take it on the train with you or use an app or smthg?
It's 16 steps down to my basement office.
I work from home and yes, it's as great as you think. I'm 11 years till retirement and I will NEVER work in an office ever again.
TL:DR - Ride my bike along a precarious but not terrible inner city suburb of Melbourne Australia. It takes about 10-15 minutes to go 4km. I have the option of a 25 minute riverside bike ride if I'm willing to give up my sleep in.
I live in an "inner suburb" of Melbourne Australia, and I work at a community centre just a few tiny city suburbs away, 4km.
I have an e-bike that I use as my primary vehicle, because of the way my migraine disorder manifests and overlaps with another condition, I can't drive a car. So I've learned how to get by completely carless - living in the inner city suburbs helps so I'm privileged in that regard. But the ebike has been a game changer.
Before covid I had a job about 6km away and I was wasting so much money on buses and uber, it was two buses and an awkward connecting power-walk that meant frequent missed connections and also pushed me just over onto the more expensive ticket because of how our public transport fee system works. So I would lazily uber to work several times a week. And since I was working part time, it wasn't even worth it some days when I had a 2 hour shift. ~40% of my pay cheque would go to ubering to work.
Then covid hit and our state went into lock down. The community centre ran a food bank so my 2 or 3 hour part time shifts became 12 hour days as demand increased but staffing couldn't. I'd always miss the last bus, and uber drivers were few and far between. I tried riding my bike but the 12km return trip was just a bit too far on top of the 12 hour day, so I bought an ebike.
I got a new job, closer, and a very nice ride. I have multiple route options, one of which is a gorgeous separated shared pedestrian-cycle path that follows the local river which I often ride home - I finish at the optimum dog walking time so I get to meet so many puppies on my leisurely ride home. But it's very slow (because of all the dogs which aren't supposed to be off leash, but are) so, my preferred route to work is the fast way. It cuts right through the the town centre, it's an old industrial dock town so it's pretty highly developed but never highly invested in, meaning the roads are horrible and full of trucks. But the council are working on it, and in the last few years they've installed some halfway decent bike infrastructure. The danger is worth the 15 minutes it saves me in the morning.
My commute should be:
- 10 min walk to bus stop
- 20 min bus ride
- 10 min walk
however it usually is:
- 10 min walk to bus stop
- 20 min waiting for bus because the one that was supposed to come through didn't
- 30 min bus ride
- 10 min walk
Which is why I work a lot less hours when I go to the office, I start my clock the moment I would sit to work around 9:00, then start packing, go through the whole process, get to the office at around 10:30 or sometimes later, plug in my laptop, grab a coffee, chat with colleagues, read some emails and by this time it's already lunch time. Come back from lunch, do some work, then meetings, then I need to start packing for the journey back if I'm to make it back home by 17:00.
In short I give 9-5 to the company, if they want me to waste 3 of those hours in commute, plugging/unplugging peripherals and essentially not being productive the entire day it's their problem. I can do my job from home, as I did for a long time before WFH policy changed, if they think going to the office is worth the commute time then the commute time comes from their slice of the day. To me it's not worth it, so I wouldn't spend my personal time commuting to the office.
In the US and currently fully WFH, but if I need to go into the office for some reason, it's a 10-15 minute walk.
Walkability is pretty important to me, so I moved to a city with decent public transportation and don't currently own a car. I use ride sharing apps or traditional car rentals on the rare occasion that I need a car, and even though they feel expensive, my annual car expenses are still significantly less than what I'd pay for parking alone if I owned a car.
I drive 30 minutes into work, but it's against traffic both ways, so it's a smooth ride.
Before switching to full time WFH I had a 20 mile (32km) drive. At rush hour it took a minimum of 60 minutes if there were no “incidents”. Incidents were a regular occurrence and would easily cause the commute to balloon to 90-120 minutes.
I would from time to time check in to see what the public transportation options were. Public transportation looked something like:
15-20min walk to the bus stop. 40 minute bus ride to the light rail terminus. 20 minute train ride 10 minute shuttle ride from the light rail station to the office.
So about 90 minutes of travel on a perfect day with no wait between transportation modes.
I opted to “beat the rush” by leaving at 5:30am. That way it was an under 30 minute drive.
Two jobs, both 100% remote (one of them for 22 years).
Try not to trip over the cat.
Depends on which office I work at.
Cycle to the closest train station and catch the sprinter to the Utrecht Centraal.
If I work in my normal office I catch a bus to the Utrecht office.
If I work in Amsterdam I stay on the same train and get off at the station and walk for about 5 min to the office.
If I work in Rotterdam I switch trains at Utrecht Centraal to a line going to Rotterdam centrum, then take the metro to the office.
All trips take about an hour.
I get up, let out the dogs & chickens. Bring the dogs back in & feed the cats and dogs. I have coffee, then I go to my office. I've been working from home since 2010 and I'll never go back to an office situation.
Edit: New England, in the US
Wake up, drive kids to school, drive home and sit on my desk. Does it count as commute?
I walk from my bedroom after getting out of the shower to the desk in my living room and switch on my work PC. Then I go back to my bedroom to put some clothes on.
Before WFH, it was a 30 minute walk which was uphill both ways due to there being a large valley between my home and work. A lovely walk in the summer but hell in the winter due to poorly plowed sidewalk infrastructure.
5 minute walk. Of course i usually have to pick up my dogs poop on the way, but hey...evry commute isn't perfect.
Ii manage a farm. My commute is just walk outside
10-15 minute bike ride. On the way I in traffic can almost be entirely evaded by swapping the section without bike lane for a bit of trail. The return is a bit more janky because the infrastructure designer probably died from aneurysm as they were designing the road layout.
When I'm not broken, an 8 mile cycle ride that takes around 30 minutes. I'm currently recovering from a broken kneecap and getting the bus in, which is about 20 minutes and 5 minutes walk each end.
Walk 2 minutes, take the tram for 6 minutes, walk for another 7 minutes.
About a 50 minute drive. That's as close as I could get and still afford a house.
Its a 38 minute drive without tolls and a 33 minute drive with tolls. Ill suffer the 5 minutes to avoid $30 in tolls every month.
I actually live in a more expensive area than where I work, but I do so because the entire state is still somewhat affordable (Kansas) and the city I live in is much more progressive than the one I work in.
In Australia, I drive about 10-15 minutes.
PT would probably take an hour and be a convoluted mess of changing lines and trams/buses. Cycling would take an hour and not practical in summer.
I’m mostly remote now, but on my in-office day it’s a 25mi/40km trip. (We bought the house years before I got this job, I don’t have the energy to keep a house showing-ready while working full time, and the houses near work aren’t in great shape.)
The morning commute takes about 40 minutes by car, the evening commute is more like 50-60 minutes. There’s technically bus service available, if I wanted to take 2+ hours each way, but I prefer having time to eat real food and do some exercise and mabye a hobby.
There is zero public transportation where I live so it's been strictly car for the last 1.5 years but I just got a job less than 5 miles away so I'm going to try riding my bicycle this spring.
I leave between 6:10 and 6:15am, get on my e-bike and arrive at work 25 min later.
Five minute stroll to the bus stop, 3 minute chillout there, hop on the bus, 10 minute ride to the destination and a five minute stroll to the office.
During the winter:
- Walk 2 min to the bus
- Wait 8 min in the bus
- walk 7 min to work
Rest of the year: Cycle 25 min
Usually 10-15 minutes of bicycle riding followed by 40 minutes of train, then 10-15 minutes in the subway to get a commuter train to my place of work.
I walk 20 mins (2 km)
Basically the same as my college commute now. I got called weird for doing this hahaha
I leave home around 7:55 and get there around 8.
Really annoying. The most direct route is this one two lane road that has a single patch where no bicycles are legally allowed. So driving and all it takes is one fender bender and it takes me an extra thirty minutes.
I work from home one day a week the rest have to head in since the factory floor needs me.
Live in the northern US and bike 3 miles to work. Icy right now so I have studded tires and bar kits. I wear a ski facemask and skip the glasses cause they fog. Bike light since it's easy to work past sunset this time of year. Even when it was -30F I only wore one hoody (biking is hard work). Takes me around 15 minutes which is the same as driving. There's bike paths 90% of my commute but I still almost get ran over at every other cross walk. Besides the danger, one of the best things I've ever done for my mental health. And I'm not even the road rage type. I just enjoy the ride
A 20 minute bike ride. Not the most beautiful scenery but I still enjoy a bit of exercise in the morning.
Used to be grueling, 3h total time commuting in South America's biggest metropolis that left me with no time for life out of work. Now I got a bike so every day I'm riding the equivalent to a land rocket with no air bags. But hey, I can do stuff at night!