I would have thought that the quality of the commute would be far more important than the time taken.
And how would you improve the quality of the commute?
Yeah when this happens, I'm not even sure if I would mind a super-long commute, assuming I was given credit (i.e. time off or compensation) for work done while on the road. Otherwise, I don't know, I think I still wouldn't like a huge commute because even though I'd be free to surf the web, it's still time trapped in a car.I've got the longest farthest commute of my life but it's also the nicest. Well-maintained pretty country roads with only a few stops. Beats the hell out of even just a few minutes of interstate congestion in the city. It might even be less nice if it were shorter.
Everyone's commute quality will improve dramatically when humans stop driving.
![]()
Commuting time and average reported satisfaction with life. (Stutzer, Frey, 2008).
http://teleport.org/2014/06/commute-compute/
Everyone's commute quality will improve dramatically when humans stop driving.
1 hour of wifi equipped train ride (not too crowded, no train changes) is also quite okay, that would still allow youto do some workto read CFC.
And how would you improve the quality of the commute?
I would have thought that the quality of the commute would be far more important than the time taken.
Only when you're taking public transit to work and not driving, I'd guess, and most Americans drive to work I think. When you drive to work you usually own the car and are in control of everything about it in the first place, so you can control a lot of the quality of the commute in that way. On a bus you are at the whim of the frequency of the service, how packed it is, what people smell like, etc.
Orthodox Christians are just Catholics in denial.
Egyptian Coptic Christians are Catholics in de Nile.