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Many in the Bay Area have returned to working on-site at their employer's office, but some amount of remote work is the new normal. Everyone who relies on digital technology for their work needs their home office to perform reliably. Here are some examples of how I help you focus on your work, and not your tech.
Kelvin
Kelvin and his partner had been working from home for years, and they each had their own home offices. When their family grew, they built an ADU in the back yard, so one of their home offices could be relocated there to make way for the baby. The new office was beautiful, but it struggled to stay connected to their existing wifi mesh.
I ran an ethernet cable from the main house to the new ADU, and upgraded their mesh system to the latest equipment. Now, the internet in remote office performs just as fast as the main house.
Priya
Priya was fortunate to land a great job in San Francisco with an AI startup. The 3-level townhome she shared with 2 other roommates was fully wired and set up, but sometimes, the Internet would suddenly grind to a halt on one device or another, causing work interruptions. Her manager pleaded with Priya to get it sorted out, asap.
After reviewing and testing their network, I identified and repaired multiple issues: a mis-terminated cable running from the network panel to her desk; a network switch that had been installed upstream from their router, instead of downstream; and a cable modem that had not been bridged, and was competing with their router, misdirecting traffic on their network.
Geoffrey
Geoffrey commutes to the office five days a week. Like many professionals, he's up early and working every day before his commute, and it's not uncommon for him to work again in the evenings after the kids have gone to bed. His corporate IT team gave him the gear he needed to work from home - but what he really wanted was a way to watch daily highlights from his favorite teams on a big screen– to buy back just a little "me" time.
I installed a wall-mounted television and soundbar in his home office, running the wiring neatly inside the wall, and configured a shortcut on his computer that made it simple for him to screencast and pick up the action, right where he left off.