vote up 7 vote down star
4

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.

flag

45 Answers

1 2 next
vote up 49 vote down check

Checking back to StackOverflow every 15 minutes to see if your rep has gone up?

Seriously I've found that e-mail is the most distracting thing in my day. I used to have a policy that I'd check mail once in the beginning of the day, then again after lunch. Now that I'm a manager I can't do that as much.

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

My hard drive failing.

link|flag
1  
There are two types of people, those who have backups and those who wish they had backups ;-) – Chris Ballance Oct 13 at 14:29
vote up 1 vote down

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

Don’t need to say more.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

My mum :(

:D

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Urge to drink water

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

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

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

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.

link|flag
vote up 5 vote down

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.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

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.

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

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.

link|flag
show 3 more comments
vote up 1 vote down

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?'

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

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".

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

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...

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Midnight. 12:00 P.M.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

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.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

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.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Phone calls

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Someone coming over with "just a little thing" that isn't scheduled, I don't know about at all, and wasn't something I had planned to do today, but it gets discussed if not done de-railing what I was working on at the time.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Anything with emotional undertones.

In particular is the interruption that I think is unnecessary. I tend to be conflict-avoidant, and not terribly good at asserting myself gracefully, so just the act of saying, "This isn't a good time" raises my blood pressure and makes it hard to get back on task. (I admit this is more my problem than my coworkers'). I'd be better off just accommodating the interruption, but if I do so, then I'd be setting a bad precedent.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Most of the above .. Actually for me, the most disruptive part of my day is having to go to work. It is important to have face time but it is also important to have zone time. As a developer I would be much more productive if I could VPN in from home. I'm not sure why I still have to commute to work when we have all of this wonderful networking technology that facilitates team collaboration from remote locations. We've come so far but learned so little.

link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

Telephones

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 3 vote down
  1. Project Manager reviewing the code and insisting that you rewrite all the code to implement some of his irrelevant and stupid suggestions.

  2. Coworkers calling for unplanned meetings. They were having a conversation among themselves, saw you working quietly on your desk and thought you should be included.

  3. You are driving to work in the morning, mentally planning about how you can rewrite that sort-merge algorithm for better performance. When you reach office and check your emails, you find out that a priority 1 bug in your code has caused all hell to break loose last night and that now you have to fix it immediately while everyone will hover around you breathing down your neck.

  4. Your girlfriend calls to say she loves you while you are in the middle of deep thought. She gets angry and slams the phone when you don't respond as warmly.

  5. Coworkers wanting to indulge in small talk with you.

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 10 vote down

The most disruptive thing that's ever happened at my workplace is eating contests. Seriously. A whole bunch of us started together right out of college and this was our self-generated team-building idea (well I'm actually the one who can take the majority of the blame for it).

Most of the eating contests went pretty well, and involved the usual fare. But around the last Christmas, we had the "brilliant" idea of a dual gingerbread building/eating competition. We teamed up in pairs and points were awarded not only for who built the best gingerbread house, but who could eat it the fastest.

Long story short, having an eating competition on candy is pretty much the worst possible idea. Structural gingerbread doesn't even taste good to begin with, but try eating five pounds of it covered in hard candies and stale frosting.

Six of us left work four hours early that day, because we were falling into sugar comas and were left completely unable to do anything constructive.

So yeah, the most disruptive thing I've ever done at work was have a gingerbread house eating contest.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Meetings where you want decisions to be made so you can continue writing the program they want but all that happens is a lot of talking and you get nowhere. Usually because end users have no idea what they want (or need).

Usually in the end I just do what I was going to do in the first place so there was no point in the meeting other than to waste time.

link|flag
vote up 6 vote down

I work close to a busy street, so a common disruption is the sound of traffic. Car horns and especially car alarms. I hate car alarms.

link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

Different gigs, different disruptions. But to be honest, my need to get up every once in a while is probably more of a distraction than any external factor.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I must say the Phone and Tech Support, if your company's new rule is "Do More With Less!". Trust me, it is very, very distracting for a developer!

As for stackoverflow....indeed! But I must say, there is something about this site that urges you to keep checking, no matter what. Dude, 3 Sundays ago I was on this site from 2PM to 11:45PM, seriously....but I gather a lot of information...a better distraction.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Non developers coming into your office to bug other developers for help instead of emailing them or opening a helpdesk.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I'd say e-mail, in certain environments, and pretty ladies walking by the window. That can be very distracting. There are a million things that can be distracting. I think the more objective question would be, "How does one decrease the number of distractions during the course of a day?"

link|flag
vote up 5 vote down

Actually, I'm on a contract and I'm facing the most disturbing thing in my career. To save money, the cleaning of the office is done in the middle of the afternoon. So can you imagine how a vacuum cleaner is disturbing??? Usually, I just get up and take a brake. But once I was really in the zone, headphone with loud music... believe it or not, the cleaner tried to pass the vacuum around my chair... she was so close, I felt the blow in my hair... and then get out of concentration.

link|flag
1 2 next

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.