Hi Joel
Here in the UK we have developed NearDesk. It is a card which allows you
to move from space to space within the registered network. Unlike the
Coworking Visa, you have to pay for deskspace that you use, but you can do
this on a PAYG by the hour basis. We are fully up and running at
Facebook!
VH Visa
From: coworking@googlegroups.com [mailto:coworking@googlegroups.com] On
Behalf Of NearDesk
Sent: Wednesday, November 21, 2012 3:32 AM
To: coworking@googlegroups.com
Subject: [Coworking] Re: Taking a work vacation to another spot
Hi Joel
Here in the UK we have
These days, we are working on CoPass http://www.copass.org/, an
open-source, interoperable platform with, to start, the only ambition of
facilitating mobility among coworking spaces. Coworking Visa is great but
as people do not know exactly their rights, they are not confortable with
asking
Has there been further talk about getting the Coworking Visa brought into
the 21st century? Being in this group for the last 2+ years there are
definitely a core of us that understand it is out there and available, and
we use the wiki to find out which spaces take it (when they list it). But
try http://www.sharedesk.net
On Saturday, August 25, 2012 5:09:35 PM UTC+2, cave...@nospam.gmail.com
wrote:
Hi all,
To get away from the daily life and get a lot of work done, I've thought
maybe going out of town and working might be a fun idea. Get to see another
town, another coworking
We're up and
runninghttps://groups.google.com/forum/?hl=enfromgroups#!topic/coworking/S4_DetotLbg,
come see!
On Saturday, September 8, 2012 10:48:31 AM UTC+2, Jeannine wrote:
The Coworking Visa is a basic exchange program; There are also several
subgroups of Coworking spaces that have
Sorry to say Loosecubes is shutting down so that is no longer an option
right now. Creative Density does participate in the Coworking Visa giving
two free days to out of towners that are part of another coworking space,
and we've had coworkers do workcation from all around the US in the last
The Coworking Visa is a basic exchange program; There are also several
subgroups of Coworking spaces that have their own exchange programs.
I have had quite a lot of luck just cold calling coworking spaces on behalf
of my members to see if we can set something up; I haven't had a no yet.
Don't know where you are based, Rob, but NearDesk card allows you to work
from any location.
Melody
On Saturday, 25 August 2012 16:09:35 UTC+1, cave...@nospam.gmail.com wrote:
Hi all,
To get away from the daily life and get a lot of work done, I've thought
maybe going out of town and
Rob, you should look into the Coworking Visa, too - an international
network of over 200 coworking spaces allowing coworkers from elsewhere a
few days of desk community time. You can find participating coworking
spaces on the Coworking
We do it all the time Rob; there is no better way to experience other
collaborative cultures, environments, and spaces, than to get out there and
experience them. The Cospace in N.
Austinhttp://cospace.co/austin-tx/cospace-n-austin/does have an option to
just buy a day or two but I'm really
Chiming in here, too - I love traveling and one of my favorite parts about
traveling these days is the fact that I can drop into a coworking space in
almost any city I visit, even if it's just for a day or two.
It's so great to find places that are different but still familiar in a way. A
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