Google's super high-tech new office building has terrible Wi-Fi

midian182

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Facepalm: Have you ever had to work in an office with spotty Wi-Fi? It does happen, but one wouldn't expect to find such a thing within the walls of tech behemoth Google. According to a new report, the awful Wi-Fi is something that the company's AI designers at its new San Francisco office have been dealing with for months.

The Bay View campus in Mountain View has been promoted by Google as featuring the latest in cutting-edge tech and design, boasting "an environment where everyone has the tools they need to be successful," writes Reuters. But it appears those tools don't include good Wi-Fi.

According to six people familiar with the matter, employees have had to plug their laptops into ethernet cables at their desks, or use their phones as Wi-Fi hotspots. Some were even told by managers to go and work from an attached café or take a walk outside to try to find better connectivity. Google has also tried issuing some staff new laptops with more powerful Wi-Fi chips.

The Bay View campus is the first to be entirely designed and built by Google. The company is using it to house some of those working on its highest-priority AI projects. One AI engineer assigned to the building complained that the unreliable Wi-Fi didn't help Google's push to get its workers back in the office for three days per week.

"You'd think the world's leading internet company would have worked this out," he said.

Google has confirmed there have been Wi-Fi "connectivity issues" in Bay View, and several improvements have been made to address the issue. The company hopes to have a fix in the coming weeks.

Although Google has not publicly said what is causing the Wi-Fi problems, workers claim it is due to the 600,000-square-foot building's unique, wave-style rooftop covered with "dragonscale solar skin" interfering with the Wi-Fi signal.

In June last year, Google started clamping down on those failing to adhere to its RTO mandate. It started tracking hybrid employees' office badges to ensure workers are coming in on the days they're supposed to. Office attendance records are recorded for performance reviews, and those workers who are consistently absent from the office are sent reminders. There was also an internal memo stating that those working remotely full-time near a Google office should "consider" switching to hybrid.

Bay View has a slew of amenities, including two kitchens that serve seven cafes, toxin-free materials, and more, all designed to make the transition from full-time remote work to office work less painful for employees, but it seems reliable Wi-Fi was something Google overlooked.

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Unfortunately architects rarely are up to date on how their designs affect occupants or their specific needs. Like many professionals, they get their certificate then go to work and rarely update their knowledge, simply relying upon what they learned 10, 20, 30+ years prior .....
 
“toxin-free materials” is an amenity now?

What was going on in the old office building?

This made me laugh too. It's a great post-capitalism soundbyte. "If you're extra smart and get a job at a big company like Google, you can even work in a non-toxic environment!".
 
Unfortunately architects rarely are up to date on how their designs affect occupants or their specific needs. Like many professionals, they get their certificate then go to work and rarely update their knowledge, simply relying upon what they learned 10, 20, 30+ years prior .....
Given it's a completely unique roof design, I think we can forgive the designer for not understanding how it would impact wi-fi signals. I suspect they've all learned something along the way here.
 
What a fugly building and interior. The couple of images of the inside look awful. I hope they overpaid for that crappy building design (I'm sure they did and now they're kicking themselves).

I find it hilarious that the awful building design is wreaking havoc on their wi-fi capabilities.
 
They should have hired Techspot commenters to get the job done properly. Our guys know everything about deploying at scale. And they can tell you all about how stupid big businesses are. And they will.

Since you asked and based on the limited intel, I would consider adding access points to either the ceilings or on the support beams to help compensate the areas where the WIFI is weak.

And yes, there are some big businesses are stupid and I do not know how they are still in business. In this case, they were probably so focused on making something unique that WIFI got overlooked.
 
I really wish I knew the salaries of a few of these people to see if theyre constant whining about having to work in a building is worth me giving a damn.

also, that place looks like a tent city for techies.
 
This is going to be a great case study regardless, but the next question I have is a) did not a single person with input on this design process ever say "hey did anyone confirm wi-fi is going to work properly", or b) did several (or many) give this exact input and it was just ignored?

Going broader, I'd be interested to see the working list of "here are the MOST IMPORTANT things to get right to make sure our six and seven digit developers are at peak effectiveness." One of which is obviously network connectivity, and another is "can they concentrate?". Maybe it's just the unusual camera angles, but this place looks like you couldn't go two minutes without hearing other people's conversations or other distractions.
 
They should have hired Techspot commenters to get the job done properly. Our guys know everything about deploying at scale. And they can tell you all about how stupid big businesses are. And they will.
Fair enough, but even having been pre-mocked for my apparent lack of sophistication, I can't help but wonder the utility of:

- Foreground, two people talking, having to use the rail to support themselves, because what would've been a great built in couch area was instead used for one of the saddest looking plant displays I've seen (which someone apparently felt the need to spruce up by placing a mural of more plants behind it.)

- Speaking of that artwork of plants behind the real plants, why does it have a large up arrow facing up and a large down arrow facing down on it? Is it maybe trying to indicate elevator? Although even that doesn't feel like a satisfactory explanation.

- In the hallway behind the atrium opening, there is a file or drawer cabinet except that instead of being rectangular like every other such piece in every other office, it is in a triangle shape. Takes all the floor space of the regular storage appliance, while offering what advantage?

- Lower floor, concrete flooring and trim, fixed circular stone-like table seating, hard surrounding walls with transparency, and catwalk above. Did they license this design from the California prison system?

- Structural column in the center back, what is all the stuff hanging off it halfway up? If those are all the wifi access points I think I may have spotted the problem...
 
It might not be bad signal strength, but look at all of the metal and the shapes. Those Wi-Fi signals are getting reflected and bounced around like a pinball, it's a wonder they have any speed. Bet there is a load of packet loss as well.
 
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