Microsoft employees will now be able to work from a tree house
Working for some of the world’s largest tech firms means long hours and high pressure, but there are some perks. Googlers get to use the company's slides, games, beanbags, and other cool stuff when they’re taking a break, while Amazon staff will soon be able to enjoy the three giant biodomes at its company HQ. Not wanting to be left out, Microsoft is building tree houses for its employees. At the Windows maker’s Redmond, Washington campus, Microsoft has built three wooden tree houses in the branches of Pacific Northwest Douglas firs. Builder Pete Nelson, from the TV show “Treehouse Masters,” created the “branch-based meeting spaces,” which the company says are “more Hobbit than HQ, with cinnamon-colored shingles and a gingerbread-house feel.” Two of the tree houses are now open to all employees, with the third one set to open later this year. They’re more advanced than your usual backyard versions, featuring weatherproof benches containing power supplies fo...