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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i-pod. I can see pure Abstraction. |
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I find juggling to be a perfect complement to programming. You need to stand up, relax your whole body, let go of your conscious thoughts and just juggle. If i can't solve a problem or are just tense from sitting at the keyboard for to long, just 5 minutes of keeping the balls in the air help enormously. |
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One of the things that helped me a lot with performance tuning large scale systems was playing with cars and trying to make them perform "better". In fact a lot of stuff was immediately transferable. I'd rip the engine out of a car, put it on a dyno and know how it performed independantly of the drive train... make some major/minor changes and then put it under load and test it again, carefully recording my changes and aiming towards specific goals. Plus its a more immediate reward to get your car 1-2 seconds faster then it is to get your code base's execution time avg down 1-2 seconds :) |
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I spend a lot of my time working on http://www.projecteuler.org math problems solved by a computer. I'm not too good at getting an efficient algorithm, but I try everyday to learn something new from projecteuler. |
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Reading. Studying philosophy. Learning languages & translating poetry (Ancient Greek currently. It's fun.) All of these actually have surprising similarities to programming. They're hard to name, but I just feel myself using the same parts of my mind and thinking in the same patterns. |
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Amateur (Ham) Radio. |
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Probably the hobby that aids a programming career the most: reading. Tech careers require constant learning, because of all the new tools, languages, and methodologies coming out all the time. Reading technical books is the most cost-effective way of improving your knowledge. Even reading non-technical books for fun is good because it keeps you in the habit of stepping away from the keyboard and concentrating on a book for a while. |
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Playing chess. |
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Run a little server farm in your basement. I've got 3 old computers so far. :) |
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A good alternative career is commercial training (NOT academic teaching) - you learn a hell of a lot when training other people. Unfortunately, training jobs are the first to go in hard economic times. |
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Puzzles of pretty much any kind. Sudoku, Crosswords, Logic and classic jigsaw. |
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Rock Climbing and Cycling. Another vote for having hobbies completely unrelated to computers. |
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Wargaming. Programming is Strategy. |
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Playing any kind of instrument/music. I'm especially a fan of some improv guitar. After hours of programming or reading a book about it, theres nothing like throwing on a nice jam track and throwing down a jam session. For some reason it especially helps when I am stuck on a problem. |
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Woodworking - it exercises a similar portion of the brain but gives you something more tangible as a result. The two complement each other quite well - woodworking gets you up and moving and working physical muscles and programming lets you sit down and relax. Both require similar skills in problem solving and optimization. |
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Video Games! and Cigarettes! |
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ladies ...i kid, i kid |
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Playing guitar, believe it or not. When I work from home, I find I can work through problems easier if I take guitar breaks. |
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Photography. If you see beauty in code, you can see beauty in imagery. |
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My hobbies (drums and motorcycles) have nothing to do with computers whatsoever. I find that having hobbies outside of the industry help to clear my head and provide balance to my life. |
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Poker. I'm convinced that there's no hobby more tightly linked to programming than a good game of Texas Hold 'Em. |
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MUDding. Learn how to slash, hack and slay your boss. In text mode. Learn regexps with TinyFugue(mud client). Because proper scripts and regexps will save you characters life :P And then become programmer / wizard in a LPMud (today rather the branched LDMud) and stop cheating. Darn. Learn about OOP in LPC, a totally awkward language with PCRE and Lambdas. Wohoo! Learn about developer-hierarchies that are sometimes worse than everything you might experience at work (the don't name the "chief" developer at some MUDs "God" for fun)! Alternative: Windows-Installer-and-Maintenance-Idiot for the whole family! Yeah! The boredom! The anguish! |
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Alcoholism. Ted Dziuba has some other suggestions, too: http://teddziuba.com/2009/02/effective-vices-for-the-it-pro.html |
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