It is definitely not good for my company and me in the long term. I could potentially expose too much of my personal data to my company, or worst, accidentally leaking the company's data to my personal stuff.
Moving away from it is also challenging, for example, browser history, notes, messaging, emails, online activities...
How are you currently dealing with it? Or do you have this problem at all? I would love to learn. Thanks.
The more locked down the work laptop is, the less likely you are to want to use it for mixed purposes.
If the work laptop is running an OS that you hate, loathe, and despise, then you are likewise much less likely to use it for personal things. But then you’re also likely to be hating life, at least as it concerns work.
If you are working remotely you should bring your personal laptop with you or at least an iPad so that you can browse the internet as you would do in the privacy of your own home.
Two separate laptops. One 4k monitor. 1 keyboard/mouse/headset/ethernet. A KVM switch with a USB hub to make it take just a button press to swap between the two laptops while using the same peripherals.
I have Slack installed and signed in on both so I can remain available even if I've switched over to the personal laptop. And both are also connected to wifi, so my active laptop gets the gigabit ethernet, but the idle one still has connectivity for any background processes that are running.
The company doesn't pay for hardware devices at all (all staff are full-time). When I started with the company a few years ago, I used my personal laptop with a separate user account called "Work".
A colleague I used to work with did the same. They had a MBP and set up a secondary user also called work. They had an "incident" on Slack involving a crude photo and eventually quit due to embarrassment.
I sucked up the cost and bought a separate device out of pocket. My personal laptop is 100% personal and my work laptop is 100% work (I refuse to even access email from my personal laptop). I also have a work phone that's 100% work.
Don't mix business and personal life unless you have literally no life outside of work.
Unrelated: is it weird to buy your own work computer if you're remote? I don't get any reimbursement from the company... I've always found this odd.
I can keep my personal notes, passwords, etc on my personal laptop, as well as use it for referencing docs, etc.
Same goes for company phone. Don't put anything there that you wouldn't mind leaving in the office unlocked.
When they provided one, I forced myself out of the convenience and set up two accounts, one personal and one for work.
Now i have a personal laptop and a work laptop.
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The only overlap is 1Password I think.
The software on each machine isn't connected account wise either, and anything work related that needs to be accessed when working remotely is merely done through a web browser anyway.
It's easy now to keep work and private separate since I need to shutdown one to boot in the other.
The disk in encrypted so my data is safe if they would ever take the laptop back without asking. But pulling out a disk is going to be way faster then copying or erasing.
I don't sign in to any work related comms (email, slack, etc) outside of work hours so there's no need to have any work related stuff on my non work machine