Simple question.
I only rarely do nowadays, preferring the searchability and lack of clutter that working directly from my laptop/iphone gives me.
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Simple question. I only rarely do nowadays, preferring the searchability and lack of clutter that working directly from my laptop/iphone gives me. |
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I do it only in communication with coworkers. Whiteboard is not always available, and it is easier to quickly draw some high level design on paper then in some specialized tool. |
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I still use paper to draw diagrams and take simple notes while I'm on the phone. |
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I use a lot of paper for drafts, sketches, brainstorms, equations, journaling... For me, nothing beats paper in terms of spontaneity and free-form control. With software tools, it's easy to get constrained by technical limitations, or to waste a lot of time playing with layouts and whatnot, and get distracted from the main ideas. |
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Up until today, I used paper for notes and occasional diagrams. However, I found a tablet PC in the storage room that no one was using, so I'm going to give that a try. |
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My Moleskin notebook is never far from me. I don't know what I'd do without it in meetings and such. |
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There will be a paperless office just as soon as there is a paperless bathroom. |
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I use paper all the time. Of course, I do a lot of PDF report layout stuff these days, and nothing beats holding two versions of the same report up to the light to see what needs fixing. Then, I turn all those pieces of paper over and scribble down notes. Something about being able to jot down a few words and a simple diagram with a pencil is still more flexible and usable than any of the note-taking tools I've got on my PC. |
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Paper is my primary thinking aid. When solving a problem, the immediate memory of brain is really limiting. Putting things down on paper helps. Also, writing is a way of thinking, expressing thoughts in words. Notes, diagrams, lists of pros/cons, checklists. They are mostly written once, kept around for some time and then disposed. |
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I use paper (& photo copier) to prototype user interfaces, map out data structures and their relations, diagrams and architectual design. Electronic documents often contain scans of my notes; paper can't be beat when it comes to non-text capturing. |
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Nothing irritates me more than watching someone you're trying to work with make notes on their iPhone or Blackberry using their big fat thumbs. Just write it down for crying out loud! |
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I use paper in software development to keep a journal of every day. This way I can refer when needed to a specific day and know what was going on. |
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I do put down short reminders (sticker type) when in meetings just to keep them in memory until I get back to my computer. Otherwise I'm try to avoid paper as much as possible, I just loose them. Also in our office everyone has something like a whiteboard, not that large, but it doesn't really matter behind us, so when discussing designs and such, we almost always draw on those instead. I really can recommed a whiteboard at every developers place and large ones in every meeting room. |
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I personally do not use paper for any true documentation or printed materials. I've maybe printed 100 pages in the last year. However, scratch paper if you will for trying to design items, or making quick "notes" when I'm in the middle of programming items is typically very helpful. I used to use Notepad for those types of In Progress notes, but I just found that it got in the way and that a quick scribble on a piece of paper is good. Now the stuff that I write really only makes sense to me, but that is the purpose. |
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My short range task list is always written on a piece of paper and that paper is sitting right between my keyboard and monitor. That keeps me focused on my tasks and the deadlines that are coming up. I tried keeping that list in notepad and Outlook, but the problem was that they were never open when I needed to see them. I find paper to be invaluable in this case. It keeps me in "good" with my manager. ;) I use paper when solving algebra problems. That's nearly impossible on the computer. :P I also use paper for drawings. I have tried a tablet PC, but it just wasn't as good as a piece of paper and a pencil. |
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Donald Knuth says "My general working style is to write everything first with pencil and paper, sitting beside a big wastebasket. Then I use Emacs to enter the text into my machine, using the conventions of TeX [...]" If even Knuth, who created TeX, who has been using computers almost since they were born, and who lives and breathes computer science finds it necessary to use paper, you can imagine what a great medium paper is :-) Note: He has said elsewhere why he uses paper; it is because typing has a "bursty" pace and interferes with thought. [Found it: His first copy is written in pencil. Some people compose at a terminal, but Don says, "The speed at which I write by hand is almost perfectly synchronized with the speed at which I think. I type faster than I think so I have to stop, and that interrupts the flow." -- Mathematical Writing] This does not apply if you're not doing something that requires deep thought. Also, digital is better than paper for archival -- you are right about searchability and clutter; that is why Knuth enters his mathematics into a computer when done with them, and presumably throws away the paper. |
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My desk is a mess of papers. I like to take notes and write down a lot of stuff. I suppose maybe because I retain information better in my brain if I write it down. I tend to write very loose specs on notepads so I have a general outline when I write the real specs out. Plus, writing something out is usually quicker and easier for me than lugging around a laptop/pda/whatever. |
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I keep two notebooks: one for home and one for the office. These books are my brain dump. They keep all of my thoughts/ideas/notes consolidated. I can quickly make sketches, draw diagrams, and share with a friend. I can take the notebook to a meeting to share and note in. There is a time and a place for technology, but I don't think it is the end-all-be-all for notes yet. It is much harder to start a new job and take all of your notes (often collected while sitting in someone elses office) on a laptop. |
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I use paper quite a bit, along with other ancient technologies like fire, sharp sticks, and Notepad. |
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I used to print a LOT. I have had a high speed laser printer in my office for years. Specs, API docs, PRDs, etc--I printed it all. I'd go through 5000-6000 pages a year, easily, and maybe 20+ legal pads. As monitors got cheaper, I bought more of them. I have 8 monitors on my desk now + a laptop. I still have a laser printer/copier/fax in the office, but I no longer need a high speed printer. I print about 500-600 sheets a year--10% of what I used to. And yet my projects are more complex and involve more documentation than they used to--but I have found by having a ridiculous amount of screen real estate, the need for paper has gone down dramatically. I do track bugs, sketch out designs, and write notes on paper, as others have stated they do. I have a separate 7 ft desk that has only the laptop on it for most of the "paperwork" tasks. As a release gets nailed down, I track remaining bugs on a clipboard. I keep a log of notes of day-to-day activities and meetings, and I print hard copies of my invoices for documentation. So, yes, but not as much as I used to. |
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I find paper very useful for prototyping , calculations and some sketches . However , it is kinda hard to organize yourself using just paper . |
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I use paper. I appreciate that paper doesn't crash, or become unreadable because of format changes. It also doesn't take time to boot up, it has very high resolution, and it has an interface that invites drawing. |
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A lot! For testing algorithms. I usually test it before implementing trying to avoid mistakes. |
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When I'm programming, I always have a piece of paper on my desk, half under the keyboard. I scribble things on it when I'm thinking or while a program is running / compiling and I use it to write obscenities on, sometimes, so I don't shout them out when the program isn't working. I also scribble temporary notes that I need just for a few seconds on it. At the end of the day, I throw it in the recycling. It's mainly therapeutic, but sometimes I actually find it really useful. I've even had at least one or two occasions where I've had to root through the recycling to find an old piece of paper to find some scribble that at the time seemed irrelevant, but I now suddenly realise I have a vital need for. |
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I tried using Visio to model new database designs but it took forever. I went back to the drawing board literally and designed on a large piece of paper on a drafting table. Did the whole thing in less time than it took to create a few tables in Visio. I do use less paper with dual monitors because I can much more easily review the differences between two sps or documents. But if I have something complicated that I can't see the problem in, I can almost always find it faster if I print it out and read through it (especially if I make notes as I go). And I have a very fast reading speed, I find I can read long documents much faster on paper than on the screen. Plus I can kick back and put my feet up to do so. I couldn't do that reading on the screen as then the screen is too far away and my bifocals won't let me read it. |
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I use one of these (http://www.amazon.com/Genius-G-Note-Letter-Size-Digital-Notepad/dp/B000NGWG8U) which for me is the perfect combination of old and new technology. |
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I use paper for notes and to lay out algorithms and data structures. I have a Moleskine notebook that I've laid out as a weekly planner with lots of empty pages in the back for notes. |
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I use OneNote along with a writing tablet. This gives me all the benefits of writing on paper, plus it OCRs my handwriting and time-stamps everything so I can search it later. I do miss being able to scrunch up a sheet of paper and throw it in the garbage can. Right-click delete doesn't have the same cathartic effect. |
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