page = /var/blog | blogging data from aditya mukerjee
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If any of this excites or intrigues you – or if you have more thoughts on what kinds of visibility you need in your Kubernetes deployments, you’re in luck! Veneur is actively developed, with tagged major releases every six weeks. Drop us a line over on the issue tracker !
I still have approximately the same number of meetings per week as my teammates, so the downside is that this means my meetings are compressed into the afternoon hours. This can be tiring on a meeting-heavy day, but I’ve gotten accustomed to it.
Normally I work out of New York, but I spent a bit of time working from London and Singapore when I was traveling there for conferences. Working from London and Singapore was definitely harder, because there’s almost no overlap between normal working hours in California and London or Singapore. In both cases, it was short-term (less than a week), which meant that we could manage it with some careful planning (choosing projects that are encapsulated for that week). It would be harder to manage that longer-term without having at least some other engineers on my team working from an overlapping timezone.
There are a lot of benefits to regular, scheduled pairing (as opposed to ad-hoc pairing, or no pairing at all), but for now, I’ll just talk about the part that’s relevant to working remotely. When working remotely at a company that is not 100% remote, you have to make an active effort to make sure that your non-remote coworkers are aware of you, the work you’re doing, and your areas of expertise. Regular pairing sessions are a good forcing function for that: on any given week, whether you’re working on a project of yours or a project of theirs, you’re getting “face time” with your coworkers, and sharing knowledge about each others’ projects.
Last week, a friend and I had to arrange an in-person meeting after work, by email. He’s based on the Upper East Side, and I’m in Chelsea. Neither one of us wanted to make the trek to the other’s office, and there was no logical place “in between” where we’d have a quiet space.