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Will Amazon's Return-to-Office Mandate Revitalize Downtown Seattle? (seattlemag.com) 73

"Amazon required employees to work from the office five days a week starting January 2nd," writes the Seattle Times, "a change from the company's three-day in-office mandate that had been in effect since May 2023."

And as Seattle's largest employer (with 50,000 Seattle-based workers), this had an impact, according to data the Times cites from the nonprofit Downtown Seattle Association: In January, downtown Seattle recorded the second-highest daily average for weekday worker foot traffic since March 2020. It also saw 2 million unique visitors on its sidewalks last month. That represents 94% of the visitors downtown Seattle saw in January 2019, the Downtown Seattle Association found...

In a statement Friday, Amazon said "we're excited by the innovation, collaboration and connection we've seen already with our teams working in person together...." Jon Scholes [the president of the Downtown Seattle Association] said Amazon's return has been a boon for downtown Seattle. As the city's largest employer, its mandate instantly brought more people to shop and dine around South Lake Union, the Denny Triangle and surrounding neighborhoods... "I think we're seeing people get reacquainted with the reasons they liked working downtown prepandemic," Scholes said. He expects to continue seeing an uptick in foot traffic over the course of the year as more companies follow Amazon's lead and the weather warms up.

But Seattle magazine says the statistics show foot traffic in neighborhoods where Amazon's offices are located (South Lake Union and Denny Regrade) "at 74% of that of January 2019. Overall, downtown-area foot traffic was 9% higher than it was a year ago, though only 57% of the pre-pandemic average."

Comment Re:Title II anyone? (Score 1) 72

ISPs behaving badly, but wouldn't being regulated under Title II, same as a phone company, make them immune to this sort of thing? Of course, they don't want Title II, so why give them the benefits of it?

This. This is exactly the kind of comment I was hoping to see. In this day and age, I truly don't understand why internet access isn't considered a fundamental human right alongside electricity and water. The expectation of different regulation for these essential services is also questionable. I expect ISPs to maintain their infrastructure just as a water company would replace corroded pipes. Similarly, I wouldn't expect an electrical company to cut off someone's power because of illegal activity in their home.

Comment Node.js is new (Score 1) 304

Honestly I think it's because most medium->large corporations are established entities with established codebases. It probably has more to do with switching technologies on an established product is difficult. In the next 5 years you'll probably see more medium->large companies using Node.js only because they grew to that size with it.

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