Thanks Gwenno, I guess I can kick it off, although have already shared most of this in General.
New Zealand has been on Level 4 - complete lockdown - since midnight 25 March, putatively lasting for 4 weeks. We were only on Level 2 for a week and Level 3 for about 3 days, so there was a lot of panic buying here. Everybody is meant to stay in the place they were as at midnight on the 25th, leaving only to "access essential services" including supermarkets/grocery stores & pharmacies, and that's pretty much it. You can keep contact with the people in your household 'bubble', although self-isolation within a household applies for household members who have been overseas or are a close contact of a case. You are not allowed to go out, in a private car, to go fishing or hiking or such, in case you get into any difficulties which would require use of emergency responders or other support people.
Public transport is still running here on a reduced schedule, but only as an allowance for people to commute to their essential jobs (must show ID to the driver from the kerb, then enter through the back door) or access the above essential services. I live on a street where dozens of bus routes transit, and bus after bus passes by, empty.
Supermarkets are open, and restocked for most items, but there are strict rules on distancing and amount of shoppers allowed in the store at any time. Smaller operations are one-in-one-out, larger supermarkets have tape at 2m distances for people in the entry queues to stand on. Only one person from a bubble is allowed to shop at a time. There are long queues, as you might imagine, with bits of tape placed around city blocks. You are issued a trolley when you enter, as a) hand baskets are harder to sanitise between shoppers, and b) the length of the trolley is meant to help you gauge your distance from other shoppers. Some chains have installed perspex shields for the checkout staff, and cash is discouraged. Additional services like lotto kiosks or coffee stations resident in larger supermarkets are shut.
My company has always been positioned to work from anywhere, as a learning from dealing with the Christchurch earthquakes. So I am fully set up to work from home, and currently we are all busy as all get-out. I work for a quantity surveying firm, and all the QSs are putting in overtime dealing with construction companies shutting down all building sites, and virtually all pipeline estimating projects put on indefinite hold. Whether they will still be busy this time next month remains to be seen.
So here's a photo of a major arterial route at 6pm rush-hour last Thursday...
(You can get out for a walk, so long as you keep social distance, and don't go far from home.)