@chosafine there's this co-working space downtown and membership costs $300/month and people ask me why I Fucking Hate It So Much and it's like they're occupying this locked big space to just essentially be a cafe but without poor people wandering in and worse coffee. When public indoor non-commercial space is so limited this space could be put to much better use; like at least with a weird shop I can Check It Out.
I always say we should smash the locks and force them to be public
@chosafine anyway the public library is a co-working space that's not for tech bros. we have big chairs and tables and outlets and wifi and you can work there; and lotsa people do; and usually areas are marked as quiet zones and social zones so you can just hang or you can work in a focus zone and both are options. I get a lot done working in the library
@chosafine maybe i don't understand what it's like to use one of these private co-working spaces so i don't Get It but I walk by this place all the time with its propaganda about being an "incubator turning dreams into reality" and it's so frustrating cuz our town has a very high homeless population and not enough shelter-space and there was this BIG downtown space available that could've been a shelter or better-located food bank distribution center but instead it's like, rooms w/ chairs
@shel @chosafine@instance.business
There are a few in Amsterdam where it is like office-as-a-service. As a company (nearly always a start-up) you out-source all the office stuff and just rent a number of desk and time-share meetingrooms.
The basic premise seems smart and even a good way to share resources, combat waste and meet some other companies.
But I was in one, it is sterile, lacks a soul, is really expensive and contains only tech bro's/ladies.