USA TODAY International Edition

No room inside home? How about an RV office

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With many of us trying to find new ways to make working at home palatable during a pandemic, you’ve got to love Jeremiah Owyang’s solution.

Owyang, an independen­t tech analyst, needed space to call his own, and found a great alternativ­e to sky- high Silicon Valley rentals.

He bought a small 22- foot Airstream RV, parked it in his backyard, and souped it up for video calls. Owyang surveyed the local real estate market, and found that rentals were charging at least $ 2,000 monthly. Instead, he got a 20- year- loan at $ 370 monthly for a $ 50,000 Airstream “Sport” trailer.

“I own it. I can claim it as a business deduction and re- sell it at some point in the future,” Owyang says..

As he said this week on Twitter: “I used to fly to conference­s, now, I just walk to the backyard.” He describes the “Tiny Airstream Studio” as “29 steps from the house,” and “a quiet place to work.”

It’s also a production studio for the pandemic age, making lemonade from lemons for someone who needed to alter the way he works.

“Because I make money from speaking at conference­s, I needed to show people I have the setup,” he says. “Yes, I have a studio in my backyard; how can I help you?”

As he posted on Medium, “Now, like most, my primary stage is from my own home, umm err backyard. To ensure my message is best communicat­ed to the market, having decent audio and visual setup is critical during this socially isolating pandemic.”

So in his backyard, he flips on the ring lights, turns on his Sony A6400 camera, attaches his Movo lavalier microphone to his shirt lapel, cranks open a video conference program, and he’s ready to interview executives and give speeches.

Beyond the camera, lav mic, Logitech webcam and Samsung 30- inch monitor, “the most important” tech tool in the trailer is his 1- gigabyte Comcast internet signal.

“I have massive speed,” he says. ( He also puts the internet through an Orbi Mesh Wireless Router by Netgear.) “The setup is like a little executive suite.”

So much so that when people see him on their video program, they think “it’s fake,” and that he’s inserted a background image. Finally, a client asked him point blank if he was in a trailer.

“I was worried he would think he didn’t pay us enough money,” but that didn’t happen.

“There are different cultural reactions to being in a trailer,” he says.

Luckily, most people responded with envy, not disdain.

Recently, he has picked up gigs doing a keynote speech from the Airstream, about innovation culture for HewlettPac­kard Enterprise

Meanwhile, don’t look for Owyang to be cruising this summer on the open road. It’s a permanent fixture in the backyard.

“We don’t take it out, it’s a dedicated office,” he says.

Putting Airstreams to novel uses isn’t unique. Zappos founder Tony Hsieh bought a bunch of them for workers, and Tesla CEO Elon Musk has a village of them in the desert.

When all is said and done, “this is the future,” Owyang says. “People are going to need dedicated, quiet places to work,” and will need to seek out alternativ­es.

That could include moving from a high- density, high rent location like San Francisco to lower cost out of state, and switching from a one bedroom apartment to a two or three bedroom, or getting a separate unit for a backyard like a Tuffshed or Airstream.

For himself, “I’m commuting to work. It just happens to be 29 steps away from my house.”

Recently, he has picked up gigs doing a keynote speech from the Airstream, about innovation culture for Hewlett- Packard Enterprise.

In other tech news this week

Current and former Facebook employees blasted CEO Mark Zuckerberg for his stance on not labeling President Donald Trump’s posts. Meanwhile, Snapchat said it would stop promoting Trump’s posts.

CES: The show will go on. Despite all those convention cancellati­ons and the COVID threat that hasn’t gone away, the CES, which draws massive crowds will go on next year, organizers said.

Zoom: No end- to- end encryption for free users so company can work with law enforcemen­t.

Meanwhile, in its earnings announceme­nt this week, Zoom showed how a pandemic can help a small company, as it went from 10 million users in the year ago quarter to 300 million, and revenue jumped to $ 328.2 million from $ 122 million.

 ?? Talking Tech
Jefferson Graham USA TODAY ??
Talking Tech Jefferson Graham USA TODAY
 ??  ?? Jeremiah Owyang says his Airstream RV office is “a quiet place to work” just “29 steps from the house.” JEREMIAH OWYANG
Jeremiah Owyang says his Airstream RV office is “a quiet place to work” just “29 steps from the house.” JEREMIAH OWYANG

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