The old situation No. 1 was being in a physical meeting and realising you didn't need to be there but perhaps peer pressure was compelling you stay or you are just very polite. There was no escape for most of us.
The old situation No.2 was a phone conversation. Anyone realising they probably didn't need to attend would contemplate pretending the phone line was playing up, and unless you are a trained actor it basically sounded just like that....you were pretending. Strangely few people just hang up and give the excuse they got cut off and couldn't reconnect.
But the new situation No.3 is completely different. You are looking at the video call screen anyway, realise you don't need to be there, say nothing and just turn the WiFi off. Blaming the home WiFi for dropping out should anyone ask is far more credible.
Whilst I seem to have deviously thought this through I must be lucky; usually the meetings are interesting enough for me to remain an active participant and I have never had to resort to the above
The old situation No. 1 was being in a physical meeting and realising you didn't need to be there but perhaps peer pressure was compelling you stay or you are just very polite. There was no escape for most of us.
The old situation No.2 was a phone conversation. Anyone realising they probably didn't need to attend would contemplate pretending the phone line was playing up, and unless you are a trained actor it basically sounded just like that....you were pretending. Strangely few people just hang up and give the excuse they got cut off and couldn't reconnect.
But the new situation No.3 is completely different. You are looking at the video call screen anyway, realise you don't need to be there, say nothing and just turn the WiFi off. Blaming the home WiFi for dropping out should anyone ask is far more credible.
Whilst I seem to have deviously thought this through I must be lucky; usually the meetings are interesting enough for me to remain an active participant and I have never had to resort to the above