What I find fascinating is that it took so long for this to become reality:
Originally, office space was needed for secretaries, typewriters, meeting rooms, desk telephones that were hooked up to a central company number. Eventually office buildings were needed for mainframes, other servers, copy machines, fax machines, printers, desktop computers etc. Offices were truly needed until around 1998-2008 or so.
But after that - which is already some 15-25 years ago - most of us worked on a laptop that hooked up to whatever screen was available, and used email, chats and perhaps some collaboration software, and where data storage was in the cloud. Our cell phones were easily connected with office numbers. Lately, we don't need to sign anything physically anymore, and we don't need to write actual checks.
Nevertheless, going to the office kept being the preferred working mode, new office buildings kept being built, and rents kept increasing, long after the office wasn't strictly necessary. Only when the pandemic showed management that remote work works, did offices finally come out of fashion. Now, it's hard to imagine that companies will keep the office spaces when their leases expire without asking for large reductions.
Often it takes long for new tech and new habits to be adopted.
Originally, office space was needed for secretaries, typewriters, meeting rooms, desk telephones that were hooked up to a central company number. Eventually office buildings were needed for mainframes, other servers, copy machines, fax machines, printers, desktop computers etc. Offices were truly needed until around 1998-2008 or so.
But after that - which is already some 15-25 years ago - most of us worked on a laptop that hooked up to whatever screen was available, and used email, chats and perhaps some collaboration software, and where data storage was in the cloud. Our cell phones were easily connected with office numbers. Lately, we don't need to sign anything physically anymore, and we don't need to write actual checks.
Nevertheless, going to the office kept being the preferred working mode, new office buildings kept being built, and rents kept increasing, long after the office wasn't strictly necessary. Only when the pandemic showed management that remote work works, did offices finally come out of fashion. Now, it's hard to imagine that companies will keep the office spaces when their leases expire without asking for large reductions.
Often it takes long for new tech and new habits to be adopted.