I’m a trade school teacher at a high school in Florida and my classroom is perfect. Between 68 - 72 degrees. The kids think it’s too cold but there were years when I barely had AC and rooms full of 30+ sweaty (mostly male) teenagers is not something I’d like to experience again.
In earlier days when I worked on equipment floors, usually very cold, but I didn’t mind that much. You’d know to keep a sweater or light jacket handy. I’d prefer that to too hot or humid like you’d sometimes get in Asia. (the equipment didn’t like that either).
Huge amounts of cold air pumped under a raised floor. Problem was sometimes the console desk where you might sit was over one of the floor tiles with holes in it so the air is blowing up at you constantly.
And any time I go to a medical facility I find that all of those are the part of the national torture “Patient Refrigeration Project”. Chemo rooms are especially freezing.
Don’t have one
When I did it was always too hot 365 days out of the year
I work at home, but my wife controls the temperature. Does anyone know how long hot flashes last? I am freezing half the time.
@hchavers It’s measured in years… maybe forever.
/giphy Thanks Mother Nature
@hchavers @katbyter
/youtube menopause rhapsody
@hchavers @katbyter @phendrick Excellent!
@hchavers
Put on a freaking sweatshirt.
too many variables to answer
My experience has been “too hot in winter and too cold in summer.”
It’s just right, assuming I dress for the different seasons, and I keep a fleece in my office during the winter.
I control the thermostat. So yeah it’s just right.
Always perfect. Home.
It oscillates between too hot and too cold.
I’m a trade school teacher at a high school in Florida and my classroom is perfect. Between 68 - 72 degrees. The kids think it’s too cold but there were years when I barely had AC and rooms full of 30+ sweaty (mostly male) teenagers is not something I’d like to experience again.
All of the above - sometimes in the same day. Heats up like a sauna if there’s any sun but can be freezing
In earlier days when I worked on equipment floors, usually very cold, but I didn’t mind that much. You’d know to keep a sweater or light jacket handy. I’d prefer that to too hot or humid like you’d sometimes get in Asia. (the equipment didn’t like that either).
Huge amounts of cold air pumped under a raised floor. Problem was sometimes the console desk where you might sit was over one of the floor tiles with holes in it so the air is blowing up at you constantly.
And any time I go to a medical facility I find that all of those are the part of the national
torture“Patient Refrigeration Project”. Chemo rooms are especially freezing.