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What things interrupt developers during the day and really derail your progress?

Phone calls, OS issues, Email, change control, meetings, announcements, etc.

Which in particular make you change gears to the point that it takes a significant amount of time to return to a programming task.

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45 Answers

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Unrestricted, Unmonitored, internet use

Currently my job has some website blocked (facebook, youtube, myspace). But they missed others (google video, megavideo, google reader, stackoverflow, etc.)

I wish they blocked more so I do not procrastinate as much.

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Daily Scrum meetings. Supposed to be 10 minutes, but they are almost never that short.

Limited meetings can be ok, but as they increase, BEWARE.

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Midnight. 12:00 P.M.

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When i bring work home, and girlfriend or family sitt beside and ask: What are you doing? They are not really interested, and they just want to start conversation or show interest but after a while it becomes anoying...

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The most disruptive thing in your day should NOT be contact with customers.

That is to say, get used to not being so stuck on in your "groove" that the necessary changes to your idea of what you need to do strike you as "needless disruptions".

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I don't think my coworkers understand the cost of "context switching".

Programming requires sustained concentration. Whatever the cause of the distraction, be it a phone call, a meeting etc, I have to spend maybe 10 or 15 minutes afterwards attempting to get back into "programming mode". This time period is characterized by staring blankly at my monitor thinking 'OK what the hell was I doing?'

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Hi guys, consider this. There are 14 programmers working together, sitting shoulder to shoulder, breathing on neighbour's neck. A quarter of them are talking on skype either with clients or with other programmers from the company's remote site. A half are discussing an important bug that has just surfaced and is difficult to tackle, and a number of guys are having their eating break. All of this in a single room submerged in this perpetual cacophony! Now, as far as I am concerned, that is the epitomy of programming disruption.

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When I was in my previous building: overhead pages "xxx call 4193, xxx 4193" all day throughout the day.

Now: The person in the cube next to me has a cell phone next to a 30 year old radio and it makes loud BZZZZZT BZZT BZZZZZTZZTZZZZZTT sounds all day long. That, and his phone rings frequently, but only if he's not at his desk.

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Daily disruptions come from people trying to override the process. By process I mean agreed and prioritized work that is recorded in a bug tracking system or somewhere else. Disruptions come when people try to override this and get their things done fast-track. Unfortunately, they almost always succeed in a normal developer-unfriendly workplace.

For a particular job, at worst, these disruptions lead to total lack of control over your work. You can't plan a single day's work that wouldn't be destroyed by continuous interruptions. Any serious development would be done in the early mornings, evenings or weekends when no one is bothering you. This really starts to get painful when you realize that these interactions are one-way: you don't disrupt anyone's work and other people's work does not benefit yours. I can tell, stock options and perks don't mean a lot when you are seriously on the brink of desk rage most of the days.

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Requests for an update to a legacy system that you inherited while you're engaged in the process of writing a replacement for it is by far the most disruptive thing in my day, primarily because it's such an annoyance.

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For me it's mainly instant messaging, even though I keep telling myself I'll sign off.

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Urge to drink water

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My mum :(

:D

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AS a freelance. When I need to get work done, and my wife stays at home …

Don’t need to say more.

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My hard drive failing.

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There are two types of people, those who have backups and those who wish they had backups ;-) – Chris Ballance Oct 13 at 14:29
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