vote up 74 vote down star
55

There are good times and there are worst times. I recently had to write code in a hot room with temperatures near 107°F (42°C); nothing to sit on; 64 Kbps inconsistent internet connection; warm water for drinking and a lot of distractions and interruptions. I am sure many people have been in similar situations and I would like to know your experiences.

More experiences at HackerNews about the same topic.

Even more experiences at Slashdot about the same subject.

flag
5  
For me it is the constant chattings of other colleagues that prevent me very effectively from being concentrated. – User Apr 12 at 11:48
7  
You're all misery guts. Reopen!! I really like this one. – kronoz Apr 12 at 22:11
17  
It is occasionally OK to have questions like this, IMO – Jeff Atwood Apr 13 at 6:24
6  
From SOFAQ: "Real questions expect facts and not opinions as answers." People share real experiences here, not mere opinions. I don't think this question needs to be closed. – Ola Eldøy Apr 15 at 21:49
3  
On an ocean liner that was upside down, with Gene Hackman, Ernest Borgnine, Roddy McDowall, and Shelley Winters. – Nosredna Jul 14 at 1:53
show 13 more comments

77 Answers

1 2 3 next
vote up 198 vote down check

Interruptions. Those are the mind killer. Programming requires concentration and juggling facts and threads together as you carefully braid them into logic.

Hot weather sucks. Old computers suck. Buggy compilers suck. Stupid bosses and ignorant clients suck. Demanding schedules suck.

But none of those is a killer like constant interruptions. If you can't concentrate, nothing will get done even under otherwise ideal situations.

link|flag
3  
Interruptions for certain. For that very reason I can accomplish so much more at home using VPN than I can in my office. – Some Canuck Apr 12 at 19:53
1  
Don't forget Kent Beck saying "Don't interrupt an interruption." – dylanfm May 22 at 15:03
4  
+1 for the Dune reference. – Doug McClean Jul 14 at 2:03
show 7 more comments
vote up 0 vote down

In Notepad, live on a prod server.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

It wasn't quite programming, but some time ago I lived in a dorm with a lot of international students. One came to me because his computer was dead. Or specifically, the Windows side was dead. For some reason, he did have a small Linux partition that was still working. So he needed me to retrieve his homework he needed the next day.

This should have been relatively trivial. I just needed to fire up vim, edit the fstab file, and mount the windows partition. Unfortunately, this proved to be my first experience with a laptop not using an American English keyboard layout.

It would seem that on a Turkish laptop, you can't merely type the letter 'i'. Any attempts to do so give you some weird squiggle. To get an actual 'i', you had to hold this function key and hit some other key. I'm a slow learner, and for all the times you need to type 'i' in vim, this was rough. There were other odd things like that, but the 'i' deficit clearly stuck out in my mind.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Once upon a time, I was doing a co-op at an automotive database company. I was given a small desk (more like a nightstand) in the corner of my supervisor's office to do my work from. The door opened towards my "desk" so that any time my supervisor needed to get through, I was squashed against my computer. My supervisor was going through some kind of nasty break-up with his wife at the time, and they were fighting over custody. On a regular basis, I was kicked out of the room so that he could scream at his wife over the phone. If that wasn't bad enough, my supervisor regularly behaved in a manner that would be considered sexual harassment anywhere else. After I left the company, I received a call from the lawyer of one of my coworkers, asking me to make a signed deposition testifying about my supervisor's behavior. He had apparently licked his finger, jabbed it into the ear of one of the web designers, and asked if "he would like it more if he had stuck his dick into his ear instead." The company had refused to fire him.

I would have left after a week if I didn't need the credit in order to get my degree.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Pinhead managers.

This does not need any further elucidation.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Sitting in a small cubicle in Moscow working on a lawful interception solution with a FSB agent/grunt wearing dark glasses looking over my shoulder for several days. I kid ye not. I don't care about temperature, noise, smell - but people wearing dark glasses looking over my shoulder really irk me.

Apparently this was their equivalent of a code audit...

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Worst working conditions, hmmm. Well there was the office near the naval airstation where we were in a direct line to the runway and the very loud jets that flew over all the time. It was especially bad when they practiced for the airshow because they got to fly lower! I can remember one time we were working on requirements with our customer who was out of town on a conference call and the jets flew over (this was Sept 2002) and was so loud that the guy on the other end of the phone thought the plane had flown into our building and we were dead. Oh yeah, great to program in those conditions. At a different job we did a temporary stint in a trailer on the flight line. The airplanes were bad enough, but the earthquake was really scary.

At another job, I had a guy sitting 3 feet away from me who spent the entire day talking on his cell phone to his wife. That was bad enough but his voice was so loud that people across the building complained daily. I used to have to tell him to shut up when we got a call on our maintenance help line because I couldn't hear what the problem was. Once a week, the boss would call him in and yell at him about his personal calls (and they were very personal!) and he would come back fuming and immediately call his wife and complain that people were eavesdropping on him. I always figured he had to have blackmail pictures to stay employed.

I suddenly realized how much I love my current cubicle.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

In college, I wrote C code for a guy who ran a 2-man company out of his apartment, and he had astoundingly bad body odor. Not run-of-the-mill stinky, but medically-astounding smell that permeated the space like a cloud. Unlike most smells that you can get used to over time, this never got tolerable. I had to breathe through my mouth for the several weeks I worked there, until I could stand it no longer and quit.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I've had a CEO enforcing 50 to 80 hour weeks without allowing us time to use any modern best practices. We had a server crash as predicted, and the CEO was standing over my shoulder demanding I explain what I'm doing while fixing code at breakneck speed, while they called me an idiot for letting this happen. Then the CEO called a group meeting for some group-humiliation time.

It was my first full-time job outside of working full-time as a university researcher. I thought that this was typical, and sucked it up for two years. I now suss out "group stress level" as a primary concern in any job interview I do, and suggest that others do the same.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

After I've written the code, the condition has become worst.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

I used to work for a company that was beyond paranoid about protecting its IP and preventing headhunters from reaching its staff :

  • Developers didn't have externally-accessible email accounts.
  • Corollary: developers' business cards didn't have email addresses on them.
  • Developers didn't have direct access to the Internet. In order to access it, one had to connect via Remote Desktop to a "gateway" machine and launch IE in the TS session.
  • Once in IE, one could log into one's hotmail (or other web-based mail) account. This was the company's answer to email for their developers.
  • Also in IE, it was possible to download stuff and then have it copied to a location accessible from their development machine via regular file shares.
  • It was not possible to "upload" stuff from their development machine to the gateway machine (that was the whole point).
  • The gateway machine had a keylogger on it. The company tried to keep its existence a secret, but numerous rumors pointed to its existence.
  • The keylogger's logs were scanned regularly. Anyone accessing a jobs site risked being summarily fired.
  • USB ports and writeable cd and dvd drives were deactivated.
  • The company's source tree was divided in two parts: one had the crown jewels IP-wise; the other, more "regular" development.
  • The "crown-jewel-part" developers were domain experts, but not so good at software development.
  • The better developers worked on "regular-part", but they didn't have access to the "crown-jewel-part" source files.
  • There were circular dependencies between the two parts.
  • No developer could actually build the entire product on his machine. Only the build machine could do that.
  • In order for the build machine to resolve the circular dependencies, part of the previous day's build output was used as input to the current day's build.

Actually, I never realized just how much this place was toxic until I wrote this down ...

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 10 vote down

I worked on a project at a major bank. They hired a five person team from my company to implement a internal web site to replace a few of the old mainframe apps. When we showed up on site at the temp office they set up for us to use we noticed a few issues:

  1. Only two desks
  2. No chairs
  3. One phone line
  4. One ethernet port. 20 meters down the hall
  5. Floor to ceiling glass. South facing. And no shades or blinders
  6. No door
  7. The pantry for the 50+ people working on the floor was across from us
  8. NO F#&%@ing door

Two desks for five people? One phone? What were they thinking?

We brought laptops. Basic office supplies. A printer. The spoiled prima-donnas that we were, we were expecting to be provided desks and chairs. So we borrowed tables and chairs from the pantry only to have a few of the workers on the floor walk in and demand we put them back. That got us off on the wrong foot and they did nothing to help us. They would even disconnect our one LAN cable a few times a day for no reason. They would leave us stranded in the hallway when our badges didn't work. Walking by ignoring us tapping on the window.

What we found out by the end of the first week was that the people on the floor were the COBOL and RPG app support people. We were going to write a web app to replace the manual support they were providing. We would be making their jobs redundant. Now rather than having someone in accounting have to call the support people to get an export file and mail them an excel file, they could just get those excel files from our app.

They had already blocked two prior attempts.

They wanted to see us fail.

Meeting requests would go unanswered. Requests for database schemas and file formats would be ignored. So we had to make sure to invite a VP or manager to every meeting just to get a lukewarm response.

Two weeks in they installed a lock on our door at our request after we reported a laptop stolen. The office admins on the floor refused to give us a key to our office. We would be locked out a few times a month and have to call security to let us in.

After a month, we found where our desks and chairs were moved too. There was an unused storage room on the other side of the floor. Our neighbors moved everything into that room before we came in. There were desks. And nice chairs. And phones. They would have moved everything but there wasn't enough room.

We had been working on shared desks (battleship style) and a folding table with chairs we borrowed from another floor.

Two months in the other sabotage happened. Glue in the desk locks. Wheels taken off our chairs. Cables cut. We started a policy of taking turns getting in at 7:30am and staying until 8pm to protect the office. When we went out to lunch, someone would stand guard in the office. We set up cheap USB web cams to monitor the hall to catch people screwing with our lan cable. We kept web cams running in our office with a sign warning people that pictures would be sent to corporate security.

We shipped three months late on a 12 month project. We were very happy when we heard 2/3rds of the RPG support staff was let go after we had been live for a month. We chipped in and bought Pizza for the remaining people and ironically thanked them for all the help they gave us.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I have to add another one.

I used to commute quite a lot some time ago (4 hours a day). During the commuting, I obviously coded. Unfortunately, for some reason the trains had a huge amount of problems for three or four months. I've:

  • been trapped inside a closed train with no electricity for 20 minutes (while coding).
  • coded while sit in the luggage space between a seat and a wall
  • coded while standing (that's difficult, but feasible with some torment)
  • coded in the (supposedly) silent compartment while three 17 years old played rap music aloud with their bastard cellphone, regardless of the clear opinion of the other passengers (myself included)
  • missed my station while coding.

but the absolutely best of the worst was:

  • coded while eating a burger of an overly famous brand while waiting for the train for one hour. The difficult part was to eat a disgusting burger while not showering the laptop keyboard with ketchup from your oily and dirty fingers. Some things cannot wait.
link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 0 vote down

had to work within 2-3 metres of someone using a desoldering gun. think vacuumn cleaner with a hot tip. really, really loud.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Programming on an uncomfortable desk, on a relatively old machine, with 6 people next to, behind and above (!) me, one of them being my boss, all looking at me and giving live commentary on my typing, such as:

  • "What are you going to do with that?"
  • "Dude, that's less than 5 lines in bash.."
  • "A short would be enough."

Taking extreme programming and code audits one step further after combining them, I suppose. Needless to say, I'd rather be outside in the snow with nothing but a leopard dress on than anywhere near that place again.

Other nice features of that "workplace" included particularly weird smells coming from the floor at times (the place was above labs for our university's chem dept.) and constant interruptions from secretaries that invaded the research assistants' offices regularly to totally random people that just happened to visit. Granted, some of them were semi-important people, but were still annoying as hell when you had to get a job done. The air-conditioning...well let's just say I vividly remember the times it worked properly. I also seem to remember a couple handymen trying to repair the roof while some of us were on a 6hr deadline. Oh yeah, our UPSs weren't that uninterruptible either - I seem to recall a few occasions when I happily left the place to go work at home due to power outages.

It wasn't a regular job for me, more like a requirement for my MSc, but still..

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Sitting next to two young loan processors. One of the girls was rather cute, but very loud and completely shameless. She had no problem discussing her boyfriend's "shortcomings" and frequency of their "personal time".

While I'm all for it at a bar or restaurant, maybe not restaurant, but trying to write code while hearing about the sex life of a young, hot latina, is brutal.

Warm weather is even worse. Cold weather kinda sucks because I can't seem to type when my fingers are numb.

Slow computers are awful. Especially when you ask for something better and IT laughs at you because you obviously haven't been brought into the company's culture yet.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

During my education I used to work part time for a company that did tech support and web design for small businesses. One client that I had was a chiropractor in need of a new website for his business. Mostly when I had web design jobs, I occasionally meet with the client to discuss things, but then do most of the work from home. This particular client for some reason wanted me to do the work on his desktop computer, in his office. The computer was in a corner of the room, about a foot away from a bookshelf that made the seating situation very uncomfortable (ironic, him being a chiropractor and all). However, the bad seating wasn't even close to being the worst part. While I was working, so was he. That's right. Patients would come in to the office, and he would do treat them while I sat there, typing away. I'm sure you can imagine the back-cracking and moaning sounds I had to put up with... Ick.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Probably the worst situation/conditions I've ever had to code in was when, at a previously company, we released a 'finished' software product to a customer that was about 3 months short of finished. The product was functional but it was far from a polished product. So the situation was our trainer was scheduled to be on-site for 2 weeks for full training of the product, plus conversion of an existing product's data. The trainer would do her job during the day, compile a list of problems and then myself and another developer would work all night to solve that days problems since we couldn't take the system down during the day to make changes. We did that for the full two weeks and pretty much kept the process seamless to the customer who appreciated all the hard work we had put in. If it wasn't for the damned sales person who promised the delivery dates it could of been a much more pleasant process.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I had faced a really worst experience you people never thought about that. When I was fresher I joined a small company in india. My Ex-Boss was same culture of me. He used to be nice when he was selected to his team. After that only i came to know his real face. First day of work they assigned a project without any training and they informed to me you have to give demo within a week. One more guy as well joined with me. He also got one new project he aslo need to demno to them within a week. After one weeks of struggle (more than 14 hours each day work) finally I was ready for demo.

First was my friend's turn he hadn't finished his module. My boss scold him with local bad words(worser than all bad words in english) you people never belive that he got beat from my boss. Next is my turn i was completely nerve but gods grace i was escaped with scolding.

First 1 year I had worked the same environtment my friend had quit after his first demo exp. This is still happening in that company i dont want to tell the name here.

When I was working overe there Every day I used to see tears on any one of my collegue.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

This was mine:

I once worked at a place where once I finished anything, I would get 3-5 new work items. This tended to be a little demoralizing as after about a dozen of these, I suddenly have a long list of things to work on and felt like I was drowning in things to do. Never mind that other things would come up and I'd have to stop what I was working on to get this new thing done, whatever it was.

At the same place, I also would have to undo my fixes for some bugs that was more than a little annoying at times. I would fix the bug, which could be as simple as fixing a typo but have to undo the change. sigh

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

I was not exactly programming, but the worst time & place I have ever used a computer was during my military service (401 AA regiment, in Draguignan, France - it was still compulsory in my time). Our offices were above a courtyard, and on some days, they would get an anti-aircraft radar out, in the middle of the courtyard, and start it (I think it was a Roland system ; we only had 3 types of SAM: Roland, Hawk and Mistral).

The radar was rotating relatively fast, and each time if would be turned into the direction of my desk, it produced the strangest effect I ever seen on a computer: It was making the mouse pointer jump by approximately one inch, up screen, and then back as soon as the radar had turned.

Now, don't ask me why, or how it could happen, or what kind of electronic hardware was upset by the radar, I truly don't know. But their was this weird interaction between Windows 3.1 and the radar. You would try to drag your mouse across the screen and every second or so your pointer would jump up by an inch and back to position.

It made selecting anything on the screen nearly impossible and an horrible, frustrating, nerve-cracking experience: You would keep double clicking on the wrong files, on the wrong Excell cell, on the wrong part of the document you were editing.

We had to ask our Captain to tell them to shut their radar off, because no work was possible, ever.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I used to work in a small software consulting firm that requires quite a lot of overtime on most of the projects. The building where this office is located turns off the air conditioning during the after hours. That is weekday after 7PM and weekend all day. You can request the AC to be turned on, but that would cost the boss, who has already been trying to squeeze every penny out of the project, $80 per request. And obviously, we would not get it!

Now imagine you have to trace that tricky bug on a Friday night in the summer with the AC turned off and the air in the office is so stiff that your brain is not even functioning normally. Better yet, if you try do anything related to the server stuffs and you have to go into the small server room with two racks of servers running. The noise, the heat and the stress would drive anyone nuts for sure. I am glad that I quit and am able to move on to a much more reasonable company. But when I look back, it is still fascinating how I survived those tough days!

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

On an indoor government shooting range to program the target system, while at the same time remedial training of very bad shots was going on...and my body armor was 50 feet and three locked doors away.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

I remember when I had to code in an oil field, near the jungle, in East Sumatra, Indonesia. Far from anywhere, got a dirty toilet. No internet at all. When you get out from that small building in the dusk, there are so many grasshoppers and other insects flying around.

That's not over. Our four wheel drive vehicle must struggle with flood and try to avoid water snake.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Large company intranet, inherited project, written 100% in client side JavaScript.

And not with jQuery/YUI/EXT libraries and such.

No... This JavaScript was the kind that is optimized for IE5/6, new ActiveXObject() everywhere, written in FrontPage, a set of ten to twenty redone functions on each page.

I swear to god the person who left this for us was the same guy who wrote that kur05hin article I remember laughing at back in the day. Uggh!

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

"i had to work for 3 months at an island" ... far from civilization, no women, no beer... for little money

link|flag
vote up 4 vote down

Keyboard. You can have the fastest Computer ever, the best IDE, the perfect work environment, but if you keyboard is faulty, it will get on your nerves.

I was once working on a project, then the keyboard failed to get caps on, sometimes the space bar just didn't work, some keys failed to type the characters, sometimes it typed them twice. That damn keyboard was possesed. Finally, in a rush of anger, I throw the keyboard against the wall, and then destroyed the hell out of it, just like a rockstar destroying a guitar.

Messing with a programmer's keyboard is serious business.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 5 vote down

I was asked to come and talk with the development team. "The guy we're training just isn't getting it, and we're running out of training time. We want you to take over." "How much training time is there?" "There was two weeks, but we're down to twenty minutes." "Oh." They moved us into a rented space across the street when Brad, our lead, refused to put the computers on the same circuit as the arc welders. It was half full of cars. "How come there are cars in our office?" "It used to be an auto body shop. They'll be gone tomorrow." The cars never left, but they were all old '60s and '50s beasts and I liked them. The mechanic's pit was covered with loose sheets of 3/4" plywood and we put our desks on them. Next door to us was a Salvation Army store and we bought all our office supplies there. It was like being in the 1950's - everything was ancient and made of metal. One day I asked Brad what to do, and he said, "Do whatever you want, just get the job done." And suddenly it was one of the best jobs I have ever had.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 15 vote down

In a bathroom.

The startup a join overflowed their area. They started doubling up, then doubling up at desks in the hall. I had the "luck" of being the one they stuck on one side of a small mens bathroom (single person, no stalls). Piss everywhere, as the toilet was still used when I wasn't physically there to prevent people from coming in, and the devs were slobs. Was there for 6 months - in the winter the heat didn't work (cut down on the smell at least) and in the summer, air didn't really work well (in South Carolina, so damn hot and humid. No ventilation). I finally quit when it got so bad I was gagging at my desk.

link|flag
5  
That's just... that's... just... that's... – mmyers Apr 20 at 14:54
show 1 more comment
vote up 0 vote down

I wrote a small app on a consulting basis for a law firm once where I was asked to make a few last minute changes on-site when I showed up to deliver the final application. The changes were fairly trivial (about 3-4 hours of work) and they offered me an office to work in so everything seemed kosher, until...

A secretary, one of the end-users of the app I was delivering, wandered into the office and engaged me in a discussion about how she wanted to change careers and become a programmer because we "made so much money" and asked if she could sit next to me and learn to program by watching me. For the entire 4 hours, she looked over my shoulder and would ask for each line of code, "What does that do?" or "How does that work?"

It was a frustrating experience, but I can't complain too much. I was, after all, on getting paid an hourly consulting fee.

link|flag
1 2 3 next

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.