Do you cultivate an alternative career/hobby which complements or refreshes your primary role as a developer? If so, what is it and why?
Also see these related questions:
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Do you cultivate an alternative career/hobby which complements or refreshes your primary role as a developer? If so, what is it and why? Also see these related questions: |
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Answering questions on Stackoverflow.com |
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Cooking and baking, especially baking breads and cakes. Any sort of culinary endeavor is basically science you can eat. Besides this, I work out often, play chess, read books and articles in many different subjects (although I seem to drift back to cookbooks...). |
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Exercise, it helps the mind clear and in the end you feel better. I think it's more important that I get that hour of just me time to decompress against the day. |
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Cheers ! :) |
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Sailing I find the variables you have to take into consideration, the patterns you have to follow and the physical excersion you have to put in to get a good result all go clean to hell when you get slapped by a wave and the boat stops dead in the water. Whenever something breaks or goes wrong, there's always the opportunity to do some problem solving. I've learned everything I know about Marine diesel engines upside down in a lumpy sea. (The most important things I've learned are to make sure you have plenty of diesel and that you service the engine!) I've also learned that with appropriate use, rope can be a good substitute for steel if you think laterally about the applciation. It also gives you a chance to speak to the crew on your boat, and the crew of other boats in the bar afterwards. That, and it's a great leveller. I have shared boats with Project Managers, company owners, network engineers, nurses, builders and students. We all have to work together every time, or somebody will get hurt. Rather a bad day on the water than a good day in the office. |
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poetry,reading,sketchin,rebooting windows (its mre of a compulsion),taking loooooong walks (yikes i sound lyk i m dead) and my favourite DOING NUTHING. |
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Flying airplanes and sailplanes. When I'm flying it is guaranteed I am giving the part of the brain that I use to program a rest. It is the most live reminder of a physical life rather than the virtual world I'm usually stuck in. It is the definite red pill... without the pain. |
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Cycling at summer and snowboarding at winter. They really help me clear my mind. |
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Playing TT (ping pong) |
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Absolutely anything that makes you happy and helps you relax. |
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Chess, guitar and exercise. Each refreshes your mind. |
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Acrobatics! Without really `working out' you exercise all the muscles in your body. Including the problem areas for computer users: arms and shoulders. And it is also a great way to practise your social skills: working together and trusting others to save you, should you fall. Works both ways: learn to care for others. Most importantly: it is great fun! |
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Flying. It gives you a great feeling of freedom. It has practical math, physics, meteorology, and yet anyone can do it. It is full of interesting puzzles. As in programming, there are differences of opinion about things, but you can always get down to brass tacks. There is a cameraderie among pilots, and an attitude of looking out for each other, that we could all learn from. |
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Paragliding. Nothing else is so relaxing and endorphine-filling. Well, maybe drugs, but there are cooler ways to kill oneself (I.e. paragliding). |
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I practice parkour (a real agile method) to keep in shape. When your work is totally non-physical, you need some physical exercise to be able to continue working. (Although sometimes it feels that I get the disadvantages of both - sore neck and back from not moving enough, plus sore leg and arm joints from moving too much. O_o) |
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Gaming,
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I play the Violin. This hobby started off long before I discovered programming or computers for that matter. It has helped me be a little more creative while writing my code and a little more thoughtful when I play my Violin. I remember reading a paper about how both, playing an instrument and writing code, complement each other. Apart from this I also enjoy reading - Poetry, Philosophy, SF. Cycling is something I picked up recently so I could keep fit. :) |
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Running. It is a meditative dynamic dream-like state that clears out your head and refreshes your body. |
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topcoder, project euler |
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Puzzle solving (sudoku and the like) is definitely one. I like algorithms. The downside is that i always wind up creating programs that solve those puzzles for me, so i'm back to programming. |
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I brew beer in my spare time. It's a lot of fun to be able to make something that gets you drunk. Plus there's the creative aspect of creating a beer that no one has ever made before (or one that's so crazy the big beer companies would never go near it). It's also a long-term project because of the time it takes to ferment, so it's a good contrast to the must-do-it-now deadlines in the software world. I also enjoy cooking in general... it's much more analog, with recipes being very flexible and not subject to rigid rules and exact amounts. I also collect, use, and restore fountain pens. There's very little that contrasts with a word processor as well as a writing instrument (for paper!) that has to be filled with ink from a bottle. The feel of writing with one is so smooth and different/better than a ballpoint that it actually makes me want to take notes (it was this effect on me that made me switch to using them in college -- I think I would have failed a lot of classes if it didn't make me take so many notes). Then there's the fact that they're works of art, many made out of precious metals and quite stunning, plus the older ones are antiques. They're also user-serviceable machines, so you get the fun of tinkering with them. And they're a great way to spend a lot of money really quick, since antique + precious metals = expensive. Wait, that's not a good thing... |
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playing video games. even better writing your own games for fun.. |
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WHATEVER YOU ENJOY. Don't pay any attention to what others say. There's no ONE thing that's best for everyone. Do something YOU enjoy and can lose yourself in. |
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Yoga. My team leader on one of the previous jobs did yoga sessions during his lunch break. (This involved a headstand for a certain fixed lenght of time and, of course, other exercises). I have to tell you, if he had a problem he was trying to solve, he ALWAYS came back from his yoga session with a solution. Would the effect be the same for any other type of physical activity? I don't know. Maybe. Or maybe the headstands are the 'secret'. I should try it someday. |
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Rock Climbing. I've done my share of hiring in this industry, and the only strong correlation between programming skill and any other activity has been with Climbing. The strongest team I ever worked with was 4 climbers and 1 non-climbing junior dev. The correlation goes the other way too. Traveling the world to climbing destinations, it's astonishing how many of my fellow dirtbag wanderers are contract developers back in the world. (Generally working in Microsoft technologies, so maybe there's a pragmatism correlation there too!) |
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Music. it's relaxing and studies have shown that there are many intelligence type of advatages as well. pick up a guitar! |
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Electronics (see Arduino) -Adam |
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Try Brazilian Jui Jitsu. Not only will you receive the much needed physical excercise and stress relief programmers are typically lacking, it's also very tactical. Its similar to a large switch statement...if he puts his arm here, break it, if he grabs there, break the grip, if he shifts weight this way, sweep him over to his back, etc etc. The combinations of different techniques is endless, like programming, but is largely focused on "the basics". Not to mention there's a certain amount of confidence you gain when you know you can snap on a cross collar choke and have your boss blacked out in under six seconds :D |
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Play the piano, proper posturing helps a lot with your wrists when coding. |
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My favorite hobby, and one that I find relieves an incredible amount of stress that's largely attributed to programming, is taking any old hardware i can find out into my field with an axe, shotgun, compressed gunpowder, lighter + aerosol can, gun + aerosol can, (once put an old propane tank into an old server rack), large truck, small truck, old car, baseball bat a la Office Space, pneumatic wood chopper, and finally, harsh verbal insults. Additionally, I play guitar a lot, as a previous poster said, it does seem to help with problem solving. I also rock climb and bike quite a bit. The contrast is relaxing for me. |
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