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I recently released https://stay100.app/ which allows you to find a stay faster by listing search results in a large grid of images without pagination.

Works well on large screens.

Does this utilize scraping? Every airbnb scraper I find on the internet seems to be out of date and no longer maintained after 3 months or so
Anyone have a listing of Chesky's AirBnB? It's probably booked up for years.
I'll bet the "cleaning fee" is epic.
At first I thought it's a parody, that makes a stab at airbnb by adding functions from Tinder - matching.

Then I realized I'm browsing Airbnb CEO's twitter. You never know with checkmarks on twitter these days.

It has the vibe of a parody to be fair. Took me a while to realise I was actually watching a real Airbnb commercial (and bail).
I rarely watch TV, adblock and pihole everything so I'm not exposed to many adverts. I honestly thought this was going to be satire and was waiting for the onion-esque creepy guy to announce his camera setup and onlyfans or something.

Guess it just hits differently in Australia.

To me one of the biggest surprises around the pandemic and remote work has been how Airbnb did practically nothing to cater to it and nobody else did either. Cool that I can look for a monthly stay, but I need a filter for places that are actually set up for real remote work. I want minimum, verified internet speed, a real desk with a real desk chair, a external monitor I can plug in to. I don't want to book a place for a month and then have to leave because I cannot work. The only way I was able to make extended remote work while traveling possible was by staying with family whom I shipped almost $500 worth of equipment beforehand that's just sunk cost. I can see that the market for tires is relatively small, but probably quite lucrative.
> I want minimum, verified internet speed,

I would check the reviews hoping that a previous guest would mention anything about the internet. Sometimes we took a leap of faith and it worked out. Sometimes a host would include a speed test screenshot in their images and that was great.

I spent a lot of 2021 and this year staying at AirBnBs for weeks, or a month, while working remotely. It does take a lot of energy to find the right place but we managed to barely have internet issues anywhere we went and we found that even places with about 15Mbps download (and even less upload) was still good enough for the 2 of us to work (and she was on video calls all day long)

> a real deal with a real deal chair, a external monitor I can plug in to.

We actually traveled with our own equipment so this wasn't an issue for us. We brought monitors, folding card tables to use a desks, and had standing desk converters[1] so chairs weren't needed. This relieved us of having to find places that had suitable workspaces. I can only imagine how much harder it would have been to search for places that had desks and chairs for 2 people to work

One thing I found annoying in AirBnB searches is that studios would show up when you put "1+ bedroom" and we definitely needed 2 separate rooms so that we could both be on calls at the same time. So if you needed a true 1 bedroom you would need to put 2. Seems like either AirBnb, or hosts trying to get their places in wider search results, conflate "room" with "bedroom"

1. This is the standing desk converter that I traveled with and that I'm still currently using: https://www.amazon.com/VIVO-Adjustable-Converter-Workstation...

I really like it but it was a pretty bulky item to travel with. My girlfriend's was a bit lower profile, having only one level (no separate keyboard tray). I probably could have made that work as well

My dad and I built a standing desk with the idea that people needed a packable (as in back pack packable) option. Building a physical product, machining, and marketing takes a ton of time. We had some interest on our Kickstarter[1], but continued to find that people who needed more of a permanent option. We never really pushed it after that.

During the pandemic, we tried one last effort. There was less interest then when we started in 2017.

Everything had shifted. It seems obvious now, but work from home setups went through a true evolution. If you used a computer during that time, you developed your WFH setup, and no longer needed something packable. We let it rest.

I might need to pick this packable, standing desk idea back up. The great relocation has made it more common (anecdotal) to travel somewhere for a month and work, yet decent standing desks don't come standard in an Airbnb.

Your comment inspired this - thank you.

[1] - https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/raiseddesk/raised-desk-...

that's amazing, that looks really useful!

We've finished our traveling, for a while at least. There are chances of working remotely for a week or 2 in the future. In our longer travels I was using a large 2nd monitor but I have since gotten used to just my laptop screen.

2 small things about your raised desk that might make me hesitate to purchase it.

1. I am tall so height of the screen is important. The top of the card tables we traveled with are 29" off the floor so 25" on top of that is not tall enough for me. I think I'd need something with a 30" height to feel comfortable. If there was a countertop available to work on then the 25" might be ok.

2. It would be great if the part that holds the monitor could slope down a bit. I currently have my laptop on this stand¹ and I like how I can change the angle of it. I don't like to have the laptop sitting there open at a right angle, that bothers me for some reason. This is not a huge deal, I probably could get used to it being at a right angle.

These are problems specific to me and my needs and I know it can be hard to make something that's the right fit for everyone. You've done a great job already with the different notches so you can change the placement of the keyboard and laptop. I hope you do pick it back up!

¹https://www.amazon.com/Ergonomic-Adjustable-computer-Portabl...

They do have a "Dedicated workspace" tag (I'm in an Airbnb with it right now), although it doesn't look like you can filter by it (yet?)
They do. There rarely is a photo of the workplace though. When there is, it's usually a tiny table with a dining room chair against a corner somewhere.
A wi-fi strength map would be nice too. It really sucks to get to a nice place and find the living room is a dead zone, and the only spot with consistent signal is the bathroom.
This is easily solved by taking a repeater with you or just using your phone as a hotspot to extend the signal.
Sure I can pack more equipment/upgrade my phone's international plan to have more data, but it would be nice to trust that a property advertising itself as having wi-fi actually does have wi-fi in more than the barest symbolic sense.

To expand on that:

I could also bring my own sheets, they'll invariably be higher quality and thread count than those provided.

I could bring my own kitchenware, better than the two scraped and battered budget nonstick pans the place will be equipped with.

And so on. But I shouldn't have to as there should be a minimum of service expected based on what is advertised.

I was a hardcore Airbnb user back in the day, but now I’ve reverted back to using hotels when travelling.

The prices are now pretty much the same, the discovery process is better when using hotel search engines such as booking.com and the overall quality and ratings can be easily cross-checked on multiple websites.

Compare that to the risk of having a crappy airbnb, whose ratings are of course skewed upwards, since they are the only ones in control.

Also, the airbnb website has become a slow unusable mess nowadays.

The map takes ages to load and scroll, it hides cheaper places by default and also doesnt include the fees that get tacked on in the end.

Same. I use AirBnB/VRBO when looking for an actual vacation home or the rare cases where I want something a bit quirkier/authentic/whatever. But if I just want a roof over my head? Hotel it is.
This.

Airbnb previously had a lot of character & "true" shares (people renting our THEIR space).

Now, they seem to all look and feel the same... like a hotel. Except they come with the risk that something is off and there is no front desk.