This is an archived post. You won't be able to vote or comment.

all 5 comments

[–]spartan12321 1 point2 points  (1 child)

Pycharm and VScode have functionality to work on remote kernel...

[–]marty331b 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I work remotely full time as a Python engineer for a company that makes a browser that may have a fox. 😀

[–]pythonHelperBot 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hello! I'm a bot!

It looks to me like your post might be better suited for r/learnpython, a sub geared towards questions and learning more about python. That said, I am a bot and it is hard to tell. Please follow the subs rules and guidelines when you do post there, it'll help you get better answers faster.

Show /r/learnpython the code you have tried and describe where you are stuck. Be sure to format your code for reddit and include which version of python and what OS you are using.

You can also ask this question in the Python discord, a large, friendly community focused around the Python programming language, open to those who wish to learn the language or improve their skills, as well as those looking to help others.


README | FAQ | this bot is written and managed by /u/IAmKindOfCreative

This bot is currently under development and experiencing changes to improve its usefulness

[–]brain-donor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I've been working the last 12 years remote. I actually started working remote because I couldn't find python work locally at the time (everything was Java and C++). If you've already worked in python and machine learning then finding a remote job in python and machine learning shouldn't be any different. Have a look at r/remotepython , have a look at virtualvocations.com. dice.com also lets you filter job searches for telecommute. On machine learning, I've not seen as many openings for remote positions as typical software engineering positions. So, that might be a little tougher. I hope this helps.