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TELECOMMUTING
by Grant Palmer
October 29, 1999
My wife and I decided to move our family to
Arizona. I still liked my NASA job and wanted to keep doing it.
My supervisor and I worked out an arrangement where I could telecommute.
My 4-year-old son and I drove down from San
Jose to Phoenix. Our car was mostly stuffed with my computer equipment.
Even though we were traveling in June, we actually got caught in
a snowstorm when we were driving over the Sierra's. My chains, of
course, were in the back corner of my trunk, and I would have had
to take all the computer stuff out to get them. Luckily, I went
over the pass just before the Highway Patrol was going to close
the road so we made it.
I've set up one of the rooms in our house to
be my office. I couldn't bring down all of my stuff, but I brought
down quite a bit. I have a Mac, a workstation, a printer, and a
scanner. I filled up the closet with all of my papers.
A typical work day goes like this. I take my
children to daycare and then come home and log into the NASA computer
systems. I do this by dialing in to a NASA machine with my modem.
Once I'm connected, I can do almost everything I used to do. I check
my computer jobs, analyze data, sometimes I participate in teleconferences.
The only thing that is not so good is that I was so used to the
high-speed communication lines at NASA that my 56K modem seems really
slow.
I really like telecommuting and hope I can
keep doing it. The initial deal was for six months. I'm trying to
get an extension right now, so I can keep contributing to the Space
Technology programs at NASA.
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