But that on your link -'the coffice' looks like its a specially designed workspace, built/organised by their own company? Not a little corner of the local coffee shop.đ
If you bought a potato salad would you expect potato?
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We just went out thanks to the lovely weather, is always tricky going out with DH, he canât walk far and he has impaired vision as well as cognitive difficulties, after suffering a stroke. So I need to plan ahead of time where we will go - do they have a disabled toilet there, is there suitable seating etc. Thankfully there is a cafe Nero near to us and they have settees and armchairs rather than the uncomfortable wooden chairs, some of which are like bar stools. I know DH likes this cafe and looks forward to going there. When we arrived the cafe was not too busy but there were several people working on their laptops, and so all the comfortable seating had gone, we tried to perch on two chairs but my DH felt uncomfortable so we left our pot of tea for two and went home. I just went to the supermarket and passed the cafe, 2/3 hours later, and the same people are sitting working on their laptops. The annoying thing is that there is a large library a short walk away where I imagine people can work with impunity.
Just feel so disappointed. We havenât got out often recently and is so difficult when we do that it probably feels worse than it really is.
But that on your link -'the coffice' looks like its a specially designed workspace, built/organised by their own company? Not a little corner of the local coffee shop.đ
Sorry typos in that post . Came out weirdly I meant to say staff might feel uncomfortable challenging people who have been sitting for hours at a table for four working, and only buying a couple of coffees.
Book groups,knitting groups,mum& baby groups etc can all be organised with church halls or librarys etc so no need to sit in cafés.
Nannan2
But that on your link -'the coffice' looks like its a specially designed workspace, built/organised by their own company? Not a little corner of the local coffee shop.đ
I think they're models. đ
It's meant to look like a business meeting in a coffee shop.
Iâm not too fussed about laptop use but what does annoy me is a crowd of young women with buggies hogging a couple of tables and taking the chairs from surrounding tables. My OH and I visited a local Caffe Nero recently and there were at least three tables without chairs leaving nowhere to sit. We werenât the only customers who complained.
Yes they might fallingstar- which is why the cafe staff should'nt have to resort to that.These folk are selfish and should realise after an hour or so that they have probably outstayed their welcome,even if they have bought coffees etc.Especially more noticeable if the place is getting more full whilst they've been sat theređ
Allira- but that on the link has its own little sink corner & kettle etc so no, looks more like a designated workplace modern coffee break area maybeđ€
The only place they should sit working is at a proper Internet Café,which were invented for that kind of stuff.
The OP might know that in Dulwich Village there are several coffee shops, at least one of which has a â no laptopsâ sign in the window.
Susi42- yes that would happen often too in the city centre cafe Nero's- it seems to be a theme here where the Cafe Nero's staff dont care who fills the seats & stays for hours so long as they're buying coffees.Might be time to boycott those.(not in Nero's for a couple of years now we moved to a semi-rural area) Still visit an occasional Costa though.
Vegansrock- maybe they should all have a sign like that?.....
We have a local cafe which is the same, the laptopper not only occupy the sofas but also they sit at a table and occupy the whole table with paperwork, making it very difficult to find a table if you are more than one or two. They also, for most of the time, only ever buy one tea or coffee. i hope there are some cafe owners out there reading this thread.
Whatabout - say for instance cafe-owners smiling/indicating counter to buy coffee when laptop people come in and then selling them a voucher (for immediate use) for a 2 hour timeslot (ie between the hours of 9am and 12 noon). That voucher costing ÂŁ10 say and entitling them to 2 drinks and - when the voucher expires their time expires.
Lunchtime (12 noon onwards) - they can buy another voucher for 1-2 hours and this time it costs ÂŁ20 and includes lunch and a drink.
Afternoon (2pm onwards) = back to a ÂŁ10 voucher that includes 2 drinks.
The vouchers would need the time of purchase written on them and then to be left on display on the table top - so staff could take a casual peek as they went past if they were wondering whether someone was going beyond their paid-for time.
Maybe that might be a way to tackle this - it would be like giving laptop users a space to rent (one seat and appropriate share of a table) for a very limited period of time and stop the "one cup only" malarkey and mean they couldnt stay all day. Unless they paid in vouchers of course - so a whole day would be ÂŁ40 to them and that would include 4 cups of coffee and a lunch for them.
Does that sound like a way forward? The cafe-owner would get a fairer return on their investment for those that stayed on and those who actually plan on using a cafe as a cafe would have a better chance of doing so. There could, after all, be a safeguard in place of not allowing a morning laptopper to purchase a lunch voucher if there were cafe users wanting to come in specially for a lunch. If there was a party of four waiting for a table for lunch and a laptopper was at one of those seats - then they could have a "smile and I regret it's a no" if they wanted to buy a lunchtime voucher. But it could be sold to them if there was spare room available for them.
I would imagine some of the larger chains have done a cost-analysis of lone people with laptops consuming an occasional coffee... Would be interesting to know the result?
Many use their cells as Hotspot, not the wifi of the locations due to VPN restrictions
It is not all as easy or straight forward as it seems
Nannan2
The only place they should sit working is at a proper Internet Café,which were invented for that kind of stuff.
Nannan - not many (any?) internet cafés any more - no need when most people walk around with t'internet in their pockets.
As to the solo laptoppers who hog a table for four...how can they do it? Conscience-wise I mean? They (old and young) do the same on tables for four in trains too. My response? "Excuse me" - proceed to sit down. In a café (just happened yesterday) if nowhere else, I say "mind if we sit?" They tut a bit and then shuffle up ungraciously - making a big thing of having to move all their stuff. One of the many independent cafés near me reserves three central tables as "no laptops please". It frees up spaces for people to just meet and chat. Nothing against people doing their work/research in cafés - have done it myself.
To the OP - no way would I walk out on a drink I'd just purchased! If too shy to ask, you could have asked a staff member to help out.
CariadAgain
Whatabout - say for instance cafe-owners smiling/indicating counter to buy coffee when laptop people come in and then selling them a voucher (for immediate use) for a 2 hour timeslot (ie between the hours of 9am and 12 noon). That voucher costing ÂŁ10 say and entitling them to 2 drinks and - when the voucher expires their time expires.
Lunchtime (12 noon onwards) - they can buy another voucher for 1-2 hours and this time it costs ÂŁ20 and includes lunch and a drink.
Afternoon (2pm onwards) = back to a ÂŁ10 voucher that includes 2 drinks.
The vouchers would need the time of purchase written on them and then to be left on display on the table top - so staff could take a casual peek as they went past if they were wondering whether someone was going beyond their paid-for time.
Maybe that might be a way to tackle this - it would be like giving laptop users a space to rent (one seat and appropriate share of a table) for a very limited period of time and stop the "one cup only" malarkey and mean they couldnt stay all day. Unless they paid in vouchers of course - so a whole day would be ÂŁ40 to them and that would include 4 cups of coffee and a lunch for them.
Does that sound like a way forward? The cafe-owner would get a fairer return on their investment for those that stayed on and those who actually plan on using a cafe as a cafe would have a better chance of doing so. There could, after all, be a safeguard in place of not allowing a morning laptopper to purchase a lunch voucher if there were cafe users wanting to come in specially for a lunch. If there was a party of four waiting for a table for lunch and a laptopper was at one of those seats - then they could have a "smile and I regret it's a no" if they wanted to buy a lunchtime voucher. But it could be sold to them if there was spare room available for them.
I agree with this and have said as much.
It would work I think.
Anyway am sure cafe managers/owners will address this in due course if their profits are affected which am sure they must be as a cafe owner on here outlined.
I'm firm if I've deliberately picked a seat on a train that is one of those sets of 4 with a table in the middle and a person opposite has their stuff going as far over the table as my side. It gently but firmly gets pushed back to the halfway point on the table and no-one yet has had the nerve to push it back into my half yet....
Sounds like tabletop hogging is one of the issues laptoppers create and people do need to literally "push back" - gently but firmly and take their share of the tabletop space. If they get glared or tutted at = proves the point about the character (or otherwise) of the laptopper if they can't seem to see what percentage of the space is theirs and what isnt.
Seapebble
âTo the OP - no way would I walk out on a drink I'd just purchased! If too shy to ask, you could have asked a staff member to help out.â
I wouldnât ordinarily do this but my DH was very uncomfortable on the seat and becoming agitated. Unfortunately a member of staff would probs not understand the problem until I explained it and by then my DH could have become even more upset. Cognitive impairment is hard to deal with when you know what it is like but would be even harder for a young member of staff who probably doesnât know.
The easiest and probably the only thing to do is to diffuse the situation by leaving.
I suppose I could have asked a person on their lap top to budge up and may well do this another day.
Nannan2
Book groups,knitting groups,mum& baby groups etc can all be organised with church halls or librarys etc so no need to sit in cafés.
People can make coffee in their kitchens, so no need to sit in cafes.
What happened to live and let live?
They should put a message on these tables saying that laptop users are requested not to take up these tables for long periods and to consider other customers by using the two person tables instead.
I'm sorry you're unhappy. 
When did cafes become offices? My local Costa is full of people working on their plugged in computers , presumably using Costa's electricity.
And they have the cheek to look askance at children crying or making a noise ... this is not a work place, it's a cafe!
They frequently buy a coffee first off and think that's their ticket for hours.
Don't know why Costa allows it, this office crowd stops me and I'm sure others from going in.
Worse, some people use the space for meetings, you can see and hear that clearly.
Costa, cafes are not offices!
Deal with this!
I think that I would have asked the management to ask for a sofa for you and your husband. Only fair in my mind. They sit there all day using the electricity and the sofas and only drinking a coffee doesnât seem right to me. The coffee shop not making much surely? If management wonât help then I probably would move them on myself.
Yes ask them in the chairs you wish to use to move on. đ
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