ArcticDagger

joined 2 years ago
[–] ArcticDagger@feddit.dk 8 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Også i Aarhus er beslutningen om at vikle hele kommunen ud af amerikansk tech truffet for nylig. Bo Fristed, digitaliseringschef i Kultur og Borgerservice, er for længst gået i gang i sin afdeling.

»Vi har allerede flyttet omkring 60 systemer fra Microsofts cloudtjeneste Azure til en tysk udbyder. Sidste år betalte vi omkring 800.000 kroner, bare i vores afdeling. I år lyder budgettet på 225.000«, siger Bo Fristed.

Det kunne vel sagtens være hetzner?

[–] ArcticDagger@feddit.dk 3 points 1 month ago

Jeg tror det er denne rapport, der henvises til: https://vbn.aau.dk/da/publications/sundhed-i-indeklimaet

Som altid, så virker det til, at journalisten har valgt en lidt skarpt skåret vinkel. Ved en hurtig skimning af rapporten, så lader det til, ar meget data beror sig på selvrapporterede gener. Dvs. det er ikke objektive mål for dårligt indeklima, der bliver korreleret med dårlige udfald.

Dermed ikke sagt, at der ikke er en sammenhæng mellem dårligt indeklima og dårligt helbred (som rapporten også redegør for)!

 

cross-posted from: https://feddit.dk/post/9189541

Abstract:

Working from home has become standard for employees with a university degree. The most common scheme, which has been adopted by around 100 million employees in Europe and North America, is a hybrid schedule, in which individuals spend a mix of days at home and at work each week1,2. However, the effects of hybrid working on employees and firms have been debated, and some executives argue that it damages productivity, innovation and career development3,4,5. Here we ran a six-month randomized control trial investigating the effects of hybrid working from home on 1,612 employees in a Chinese technology company in 2021–2022. We found that hybrid working improved job satisfaction and reduced quit rates by one-third. The reduction in quit rates was significant for non-managers, female employees and those with long commutes. Null equivalence tests showed that hybrid working did not affect performance grades over the next two years of reviews. We found no evidence for a difference in promotions over the next two years overall, or for any major employee subgroup. Finally, null equivalence tests showed that hybrid working had no effect on the lines of code written by computer-engineer employees. We also found that the 395 managers in the experiment revised their surveyed views about the effect of hybrid working on productivity, from a perceived negative effect (−2.6% on average) before the experiment to a perceived positive one (+1.0%) after the experiment. These results indicate that a hybrid schedule with two days a week working from home does not damage performance.