It will be very interesting to see how the work from home one plays out. On the one hand, the arrangement can lead to greater productivity- eg our first ever Skype team meeting last week got business done in record time, and that was because the format doesn't lend itself to the social chitchat which ordinarily punctuates the meeting, so there wasn't any. On the other hand, human beings are essentially social animals and thrive on/ maybe need regular interaction, without it our mental health can suffer. So while the odd WFH day or even a bit longer might be a welcome break (that's what I find when I selfisolate with my computer every Wednesday, which I've done for a while, most of us on the team have an arrangement like that)....I think the longer term effects, individually and at societal level, of an enforced remote existence as the norm, are, like so much in this suddenly unfamiliar situation- unknown.