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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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70 Answers

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  1. A desk that's big enough for two people to sit at and both see the monitor(s) and reach the keyboard. Whilst this is essential for an XP shop (or any other using pair programming) it's also a good idea in general if you want your developers to work together.

  2. Space to put books. No space => no books :(

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One thing you DO NOT WANT is a Public Address system or at least not one that blares into everyone's space that "Joe Blow, you have a phone call on line X!"

There are many excellent suggestion posted. I'll re-iterate the recommendation for "Peopleware"

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Good lighting, where I work at now the lighting above me is yellow, very hard on the eyes.

Dual monitors (I know it's been said several times before, but a HUGE productivity improvement)

Headsets for phones. It's hard on your neck squeezing the phone to your ear while solving the problem on the computer.

Good comfortable chair. We sit in it for eight hours and most people spend only 20 minutes looking at them, we spend a lot less time in our cars, yet spend vastly more money and time in getting one. Go figure.

I also agree for the low partition walls, I currently have to offices one high wall another low wall (company is trying out new layouts), but if there's a lot of noise neither really work well.

Trashcan, we snack.

A good powerful machine. We don't need the latest gamers mega processor, but something that doesn't slow us down. We want to solve the problem quickly, not to be slowed down because the comp is thinking. Skimp on some other stuff if you must to keep this one up.

Lastly I second Caleb's answer of asking your developers, they will ask for a lot but let them know your intentions and they will tell you what helps them most.

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Lava Lamps

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  • Available and open break out areas with white boards and noteboards.
  • Project rooms where the walls can be covered in notes and retained.
  • Allowance to work from home.
  • Open all hours. i.e flex-time.
  • NO politics
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  1. Blazingly fast computers with quad core CPUs and tons of memory.
  2. A 64bit Operating system to support the tons of memory.
  3. 4 walls and a door (office not a cube)
  4. Whiteboards in every office.
  5. A bookshelf
  6. A desk with solid cable management and enough space for 2-3 monitors
  7. A high quality office chair like an Aeron. Yes they cost more, but people can stay seated for 8 hours at a time with no back pain. It's worth it.

Also make sure to provide solid dev and staging servers for deployment. Too many companies skimp on this. Also provide devs with whatever developer tools/software they need to get their job done. Don't be cheap when it comes to your devs.

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A computer.

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HP-16C (http://www.hpmuseum.org/hp16.htm). I recommend the iPhone app version of the calculator.

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As usual Joel has a great blog article on this very topic that you can find at: http://www.joelonsoftware.com/articles/BionicOffice.html

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I agree sound, monitor, and chair are all important.

The one thing not yet mentioned is keyboard / mouse of preference. Ease of input is important. My wrists and pinkies have begun to hurt, and I have yet to have an employer who thought a new natural keyboard was a good idea to chip in on...

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one thing that often gets neglected is Monitor Arms for your multiple monitors. It's one thing to have multiple monitors, it's quite another to have the flexibility to move them around to show other developers or accomodate extra / temporary equipment

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free coffeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee!

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  • Development laptops. I really like to be able to take my laptop over to a coworkers desk and show him a problem or bit of code, rather than email a screen shot or call him over.

  • A public area with no walls and lots of seating to collaborate. Ideally comfortable couches and tables and whiteboards.

  • Private cubicle or cubby type space with walls that is quiet. Equipped with wired internet, laptop docking station, external display.

  • Something I would have LOVED to have at my last job: Move the product and project managers close tot he development team, in similar seating. In other words, if your shop does a "no cube walls" thing, then the managers should always be visible too. No offices. From my experiences, the "lack of communication" is almost always developer <-> manager, not developer <-> developer.

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  1. Good Oxygen supply as Oxygen stimulates brain. I've seen some offices even use Oxygen supplied artificially.
  2. Candy jar or Candy vending machine for energy boosting.
  3. The option of "Work From Home Policy", say 2-3 days per week.
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If your group includes classically trained mathemeticians or basic scientists (e.g. Physics, chemistry, etc.) a blackboard (not a white board) is essential. Most people in these categories were taught to think on blackboards and the tactile association is really important.

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Fidget/stress toys. Research has shown that utilizing parts of the brain other than the one that's your primary focus can boost over all utilization and increase creativity and thus productivity.

So, things like the Slinky, the Hoberman Sphere or any of Erno Rubik's puzzles, or for work environments where such things are frowned upon, the venerable stress ball, can be a real help.

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No matter what the layout (individual offices, cubes, bullpen):

  • plenty of sound-absorbing material is a must.
  • natural light
  • sufficiently adjustable office furniture (doesn't have to be the really high-end stuff)
  • big monitors
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Many good answers already posted. Already have many of the items already listed. For me personally the next thing needed is a book case. Too many books for the sagging hutch above my desk.

A bit old school I guess as the Web has many quick answers in electronic form. But there is some good stuff under copyright that I find useful for explaining the whys of development process to my coworkers (or myself again).

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Instead of two monitors I would suggest one huge monitor. At the moment I have a 24" monitor for about EUR 400. I like it a lot.

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"Open" Internet access.

"Fast" Internet access.

Currently we have content filtering on our internet connection, when trying to search an error or do research on some functionality I am not familiar with, the content filter literally takes a huge amount of productivity out of me. To get around this, I just simply setup a VPN to my house, but this isn't a healthy workaround for your developers. We use the web, we use it a lot, so let us.

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Details Adjustable Desks!

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I like a window, a comfortable chair I can lean back in, speakers, leg room to put my feet up, and a split keyboard like the MS Natural 4K. Walls and a closable door are also good.

I don't mind working around people, but I really don't being in the open.

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Ping pong table is a big plus

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  1. A good development machine with dual screens. Needs to have plenty of HDD space and as much ram as possible in order to make it possible to have several IDE windows open as well as a handful of local Virtual machines.

  2. An internet connection...to be able to access stackoverflow as needed ;) (Some places I've worked it was an uphill battle to justify why the development team needed an internet connection)

  3. A comfortable chair and desk. Some people have this as the top priority but I've found in most places you don't have much choice...and as long as it is reasonably comfortable to sit in for several hours at a time I'd rather prioritize the development machine which, if not up to spec, can cause you to spend hours more at your desk than you have to.

  4. A quiet environment with as few distractions or interruptions as possible

  5. Easy access to stationary supplies. (At one place I worked I got chewed out by the boss for taking more than one pen at a time)

  6. Easy access to good reliable printers.

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It has to have ergonomical designs, the chair, lighting, monitors all the way. If you design a office with ergonomics in mind, it costs far less than what you would spend modifying it later.

A place to lie down. A power nap of 15 minutes is better than

  • A cup of cofee
  • A sugar laced drink/soda
  • 10 trips to loo (5 to wash your face)
  • Bugs introduced because you were feeling sleepy.
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  • enough power routed to my office/cube so I don't short out my neighbors when I plug in 2 monitors, mulitple pcs, misc dev hardware, and then start a long compile and data export. with a bad power setup, your office will be on fire and not expandable.
  • big battery backup, so when my neighbor shorts me out, I will be good to save.
  • coffee grinder preset to grind out beans ready into a coffee filter basket.
  • pump coffee carafes. low power, portable for meetings.
  • snack machine set to just enough to make me not buy snacks, but not feel ripped off if I do. Also keeps slothful snackers from always walking off with otherwise free food.
  • heat / cooling system properly calibrated and labeled. nothing like having dudes make the office hotter when they think it's making it cooler.
  • 8gb+ ram and 4 cpu machines for faster compiles.
  • an inventory system with a scanner so moves are painless
  • multiple working video conferencing units with large displays.
  • beer tap, good beer. make fridays fun.
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Here are my personal favourites in no particular order...

  • Multiple monitors, (at least 2)
  • Good lighting (no glare on my monitor)
  • Comfortable chair (very subjective, padding and back support is essential)
  • Space to organise and store paperwork/documentation
  • Whiteboard + digital camera (for storing important whiteboard stuff when you need to wipe it)

Docta

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  • Space for the developers to put their personal stuff on. I.e. actually leave a bit of the wall and the desk free for developers to but figurines, posters, photo frames, whatever... on.
  • A lockable cabinet.
  • A Window. Windowless offices with only artificial lights are not good.
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A good kettle, a water filter if the water's bad, and good quality tea!

Also as previously mentioned, a quiet workspace, with a comfortable seat is essential.

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