We are designing our office right now and want to know what stuff you guys really care about or started loving in your office.
So -
What are your must-haves for a developers office? What things can't you live without?
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Four walls. A door. | |||||||||||||||||
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Absolute must-have: comfortable chair. I'm going to be sitting in it for unspeakable amounts of time. Really important: two monitors. Neat stuff: corner desk, so the stuff to the right and left of the monitors is closer. | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Whiteboards. Lots of Whiteboards! | |||||
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Each dev should be able to control the lighting in his/her work space to make it more comfortable for them. | |||||||||
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Things I absolutely need to get anything done:
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A good chair. Plenty of desk space and bookshelves. A whiteboard in my cube/office, and PLENTY of communal whiteboard space. I.e. the conference rooms should be LINED in whiteboards, not just a dinky little board at one end. Flip charts for more permanent drawings. Preferably the kind that are like giant post-it notes. Dual monitors. If my primary dev machine is a laptop, a docking station would be nice. At the very least, an extra power cord to keep at the office. Decent coffee. I don't care about some fancy-schmancy espresso/latte machine, just fresh, strong, regular coffee of reasonable quality. Some communal mugs would be nice for the days when I forget mine. Reliable printers. When I print something, which isn't too often, I don't want to have to troubleshoot printer issues. A window that I can see when I'm sitting at my desk. I'm not saying I must have a cube next to a window; just a sliver of visible outdoors through a gap between cube walls is better than nothing. Legal pads. Pencils (wood is better than cheap mechanicals; just make sure the sharpener works). Pens that don't skip. Don't block my ssh. | |||||||||
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I recommend you to take a look at part II (entitled "The Office Environment") of the famous book Peopleware: Productive Projects and Teams(Second Edition). The authors described in great detail the importance of a furniture policy and the appropriate use of space. One of the good statements of the book is transcribed here: "Even if you managed to prove conclusively that a programmer could work in 30 square feet of space without being hopelessly space-bound, you still wouldn't be able to conclude that 30 square feet is adequate space. The noise in a 30-square-foot matrix is more than three times the noise in a 100-square-foot matrix. That could mean the difference between a plague of product defects and none at all." And if you are curious about famous companies offices', go to Office Snapshots. | ||||
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A comfy chair. | ||||
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A really good library and the ability to take advantage of it. My favorite places to work are where there is a culture of learning and books and other resources are a huge part of it. Some comfy chairs and some books and magazines that make you thinking about programming and design in new ways are always good. | ||||
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A kitchen. Lets me heat up my lunch, or cook it if I'm feeling adventurous... | |||||
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Coffee machine! | ||||
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An ocean view. | ||||
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Attractive coworkers! Seriously, the most important thing for me and most of my (attractive) coworkers is noise level. So doors and walls can fix that, or proper spacing and headphones. Individual offices are the best. Whiteboards are nearly essential as well. We have nice magnetic ones that wheel and flip. | |||||
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I highly rate a couch. Being able to lie down and discuss or think about a difficult problem really helps me. Plus, when you're pulling an all-nighter, they are invaluable. | ||||
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Essentials
Extras
I recommend you actually ASK YOUR DEVELOPERS what they want. Everyone will be a little different but the bottom line is the better you treat your people, the better work you'll get out of them and the more willing they will be to go the extra mile. | ||||
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Foosball table | |||||||||
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The most Scariest night mares for a developer are here, Of course these are the 'BIG NO's when designing an office for developers.
You can vote if this happening at your workplace too. | |||||||||||||||||||||
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I'm trying my hardest to get a tall desk. 5/6 days a week, 8hr+ each day, sitting at a low-level desk and you're just asking for a pot-belly and DVT. With tall "artist"-style desks and adjustable stools (pref. with backs) you can cater for any height, and you can work standing-up. Plus, if anyone has to do some typing at your machine (code-reviews, etc) they don't need to kneel or trundle a chair across the office. | ||||
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Laundry room. (No, I'm serious.) I actually convinced my employers to add a laundry room to their big buildout and it worked out great. Lots of people rent apartments and don't have an in-unit washer/dryer setup. Instead of having to deal with a laundromat, they can do their laundry at work when they're waiting for code to compile, or whatever. This means more of their free time outside of work is spent on things other than basic chores. | |||||||||
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Nerf gun with extra bullets. | ||||
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Make your office like this! Stefan's Office All joking aside, look for these qualities: | ||||
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A computer. | ||||
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Preferable one whiteboard per developer plus large whiteboards in each meetingroom... Thas one of the most important things for me (except maybe for large monitors, a 24" monitor, or preferable two | ||||
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Nothing specific I couldn't live without apart from some of the obvious like dual monitor, good temperature and lighting, access to coffee, fridge etc. But I think most importantly: an office space has to have personality. let employees tastefully design/decorate their space. | ||||
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