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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Alcoholism. Ted Dziuba has some other suggestions, too: http://teddziuba.com/2009/02/effective-vices-for-the-it-pro.html |
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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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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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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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Photography. If you see beauty in code, you can see beauty in imagery. |
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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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ladies ...i kid, i kid |
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Video Games! and Cigarettes! |
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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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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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Wargaming. Programming is Strategy. |
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Rock Climbing and Cycling. Another vote for having hobbies completely unrelated to computers. |
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Puzzles of pretty much any kind. Sudoku, Crosswords, Logic and classic jigsaw. |
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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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Run a little server farm in your basement. I've got 3 old computers so far. :) |
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Playing chess. |
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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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Amateur (Ham) Radio. |
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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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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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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 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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i-pod. I can see pure Abstraction. |
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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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Play the piano, proper posturing helps a lot with your wrists when coding. |
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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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Electronics (see Arduino) -Adam |
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