Ask HN: Where to go for a work-cation? e.g. wifi and a view
I'm imagining some ultra modern cabin with an awesome view. Somewhere 4+ people can sit down with laptops, turn on some ambient music, and work in a relaxed state of mind.
Wifi optional I suppose, might be better without it. Should be climate controlled. While it would need to be driving distance from SF for us, I'd like to hear about any favorite spots world wide.
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[ 3.0 ms ] story [ 29.0 ms ] threadAs for within driving distance...try www.jalamabeach.com. Quiet, uncrowded, inexpensive, and on the beach. 3 hours from LA. Technically driveable.
Also - El Capitan and Refugio State Beaches. Not quite as far, but still quiet, scenic and uncrowded.
Or a small town called Cahuita in Costa Rica, it's right on the Caribbean, very peaceful and beautiful but again, internet and elec are not great. Near Cahuita is another town called Puerto Viejo which is a total party town which is heaps of fun.
Buenos Aires is also lots of fun, we're based in Palermo in the capital and there are three coworking places within a couple blocks of each other, and a fourth one a mile or so away.
http://www.vrbo.com/vacation-rentals/usa/california/san-fran...
Enjoy!
With a few hours drive North, you've got Humboldt, Mendocino, Marin, and other charming coastal towns. With a few hours East you have Tahoe and plenty of other places with snow this time of year. With up to a few hours South, you have Half Moon Bay, Davenport, Santa Cruz, Moss Landing, Monterey, Carmel, Moro Bay, Los Osos, Avila Beach, Pismo Beach, Santa Barbara, and more along the coast.
Due to the seasonal movements of the coastal cloud layer, some places on the cost actually have nicer weather during the winter than during the summer. Mendocino, Pacifica, Morro Bay, and (Northern) Santa Barbara are like this. Avila Beach is a strange anomaly and it is often nice year-round.
If you want mountains but no snow, there are lots of little places for retreats in the coastal mountain range that runs from SF down to SLO. Some are closer, and some are farther, but all are beautiful. The down-side is "fast" connectivity, but you can often solve that with phone tethering.
Your best bet is to search through AirBnB and similar sites.
Going world-wide... hard to say, there are so many places, and sometimes I like urban scenery as much as the wilderness.