vote up 74 vote down star
56

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

76 Answers

1 2 3 next
vote up 200 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 122 vote down

So, I worked for this guy who was obsessed with hackers (crackers, actually, but he didn't know the difference). I had to configure him a linux machine to serve webpages, while he was looking together with me at the screen, isolated from the net. And note that isolate from the net I am not only referring to the internet network. Also from the electrical network.

He thought that hackers could enter also through the electrical network, so he had a gasoline power generator, and the machine was connected to it. After a while the generator shut down, and so the machine (in the middle of downloading updates), and he claimed that some hacker was sending a signal through the net (I was connected to internet) to turn off the generator.

The generator was out of oil.

Sadly, this is a true story.

link|flag
7  
That guy has watched too much of the Terminator series – Jon Limjap Apr 12 at 11:13
9  
"in the middle of downloading updates" from where? – unknown (yahoo) Apr 12 at 20:21
7  
Also, was your old boss named William Adama? – Mike Akers Apr 13 at 17:38
3  
So wrong, everybody coder knows, hackers invade your fingers and let you type all kind of errors and bugs. – Gamecat Apr 16 at 11:26
7  
There was still a security hole: The hackers can hack the gas so they can enter through the generator! – Artur Soler Jul 24 at 10:47
show 13 more comments
vote up 73 vote down

With my boss lurking behind my shoulder, watching exactly what I'm writing.
You'd think this is like pair-programming but it really isn't when you're expected to one-sidedly explain everything you're doing on the fly.

Also, occasionally he would just drop by, giving me a surprise back-rub (I'm male, so is he, married) and THEN lurk behind me, watching what I'm doing.
That was the closest I got to being sexually assaulted in the work place.

link|flag
32  
that's one thing you never expect as a programmer -- the surprise back rub. (shudder) – Jeff Atwood Apr 13 at 7:27
8  
Did you work for GWBush? – kubi Apr 13 at 10:36
1  
lmao ! – Click Upvote Apr 13 at 13:25
1  
Unfortunately this was in one of those places where punching someone is most likely to get you court marshalled. – shoosh Apr 14 at 6:54
2  
Would his uninvited back rubs be any more appropriate if one of you were not male? 9_9 – eyelidlessness Oct 15 at 18:56
show 5 more comments
vote up 55 vote down

many years ago I worked for a smallish engineering company who were - to say the least - a bit short of office space. Consequently we had to work in the cellar which we shared with the assembly line.

Unfortunately we still didn't have enough room for all the desks so mine had to go in the goods lift. So, noisy, no natural light, hot, stuffy and to cap it all I had to shut down and unplug my computer every time somebody wanted to use the lift.

link|flag
1  
are you kidding me?? – Shachar Apr 13 at 8:39
2  
No - not kidding, and - what's more - it was the best job I've had in 30 odd years in the industry. The interruptions weren't too bad as the lift was only used a couple of times a day - what was worse was the noise - we were designing/building/testing mixing desks for recording studios. – chrisharris. Apr 14 at 11:41
vote up 54 vote down

In 1994 using a small wooden crate for a chair in an unheated control room in a steel mill in Siberia while winter approached, and installing technology that was out of the late '70's.

And in the centre of town (Magnitogorsk) was a digital display that showed the time,temperature and current radiation count.

On the other hand is was about the best contract I have ever worked under. 6 months of no overtime, the locals were genuinely friendly and learnt to appreciate good vodka.

link|flag
1  
Sounds like quite a learning experience ;-) – Joachim Sauer Apr 13 at 21:03
26  
+1 for radiation count – geofftnz Apr 14 at 3:27
show 2 more comments
vote up 49 vote down

During Christmas my employer likes to play music over the company loudspeaker. There are about 50 songs and it goes on for a month. It goes on at my desk, in conference rooms, and in the cafeteria. It is enough to make you a homicidal grinch.

link|flag
1  
Heh, my boss plays music in the office everyday. This usually fits into 2 categories: demo CDs from bands looking to be signed, or just music he likes (Led Zepplin, X, Black Flag, etc.). When it's the latter, it's great; not so much with the demos... – Calvin Apr 12 at 13:49
11  
Being force-fed christmas music like that (or any crappy commercial radio station for that matter) is probably forbidden by the Geneva convention... or should be anyway :P – Jonik Apr 18 at 6:13
show 1 more comment
vote up 48 vote down

Once wrote a few C# demo apps while mortar rounds were dropping within 100 meters of me.

My job in Fallujah had nothing to do with computers. But I took my lappy with me and coded small apps to keep my skills sharp while deployed and to let off steam while off duty.

Was in a safe concrete building, so I just kept on coding... the rumbling from outside actually acted as a nice white noise.

Believe it or not, being able to lose myself in some code, if only for a few hours a week, gave my mind a much needed distraction.

link|flag
8  
You beat me too it, I wrote code in Iraq too. Although I never did it while mortars where impacting. It had nothing to do with my job but I did find time to do a little Java Script to keep my mind sharp. All I had was IE and notepad so I couldn't do much more. I wrote a simple arcade game that parodied the role I did in the Army. – Bernard Apr 18 at 19:20
1  
Here I was thinking I was the only one. I wanted to be ready for school when I got back so I brought O'Reillys "Learning JavaScript" and my old Pentium III laptop with me to Al Asad. I didn't really learn much, but interviewers love hearing about it in response to "so have you done any projects on your own?" – Graphics Noob Jul 22 at 22:34
1  
@Ben Blank, yes not being able to google for examples while coding was definetly a challenge I had't faced since my days of coding on a commodore 64 – Neil N Oct 15 at 20:20
show 3 more comments
vote up 47 vote down

While working for a government facility, my group was tasked with deploying an instance of some stuff we had written for use inside a secured machine room. No problem. Except I didn't have the appropriate clearance to be in the same room that the software was. There was no communication in or out of the machine room. And of course, the software didn't work straight away.

So I spent the better part of two days standing in the hallway, devising tests, and having someone with the appropriate clearance (but no coding ability) take them inside, run them, go to an unsecured phone a great distance away from the actual machine, and tell me the results. Since there was no phone near the machine, reading directly from the screen was out of the question, and he, of course, couldn't bring so much as a Post-It back out of the room. After several hours pacing up and down the hallway, phone burning my ear while listening to the result of the latest "SELECT COUNT(*) FROM whatever" or "tracert somewhere.wherever.mil", it started feeling rather like I was a flight controller on Apollo, trying to diagnose a system I couldn't touch. Except this mission was WAY more boring.

Now that's what I call remote debugging. Got it working, though. They never used it.

link|flag
6  
"They never used it!" – Manoj Jun 3 at 6:40
show 4 more comments
vote up 36 vote down

I once worked on a team with Jon Skeet. Try impressing your boss with him as your competition!

link|flag
6  
Nobody said life is fair. – Gamecat Apr 16 at 11:32
4  
Couldn't have been that bad, he was probably answering SO questions all day. – reccles Oct 22 at 14:07
show 1 more comment
vote up 31 vote down

I work for a little startup company in Baltimore developing a wireless medical device for which I write firmware. The details of the technology are not important.

About a year ago my boss decided that the two of us should go to a medical technology conference in Boston where we will show off our device to anyone interested. The conference was on Saturday and Sunday. Our plan was to leave after work on Friday so that we could be in Boston when the conference started Saturday morning.

Come that Friday our device was not yet ready to be demoed at the conference, so we spent all Friday trying to get the device working, but to no avail. Eventually we had to leave for Boston, figuring that we would work on it on our way there.

At this time I was new to the company and did not yet understand my boss's fiscal stinginess, so I assumed we would be taking nice, comfortable Amtrak. Little did I know. As it turns out we would be taking the bus. Not a big deal, right? Well, as it turns out it was the $15 Chinatown bus (not exactly the epitome of comfort) from Baltimore to New York and then again from New York to Boston. And it was leaving Baltimore at 10:30 in the evening, and the total trip time to Boston was something like nine hours. Yuck.

So we get to the bus depot in Baltimore at maybe 10:00 and wait for the bus. At 10:30, no bus. At 10:45, no bus. At 11:15, no bus. Eventually we talked to someone who told us that the bus came at 12:30, not 10:30 as my boss had thought. So we went over to the McDonalds nearby to get a bite to eat and wait for 12:30 to roll around.

(At the McDonalds we met a couple of deaf college kids who were apparently on their way home from college and had NO IDEA where they were and were trying to get in touch with their parents. This was all communicated via my boss's laptop, and my boss was kind enough to let them use her Sprint wi-fi card to email their parents, who soon came and picked them up. Happy ending!)

Anyway, 12:30 rolls around and the bus does actually show up. So we get on and begin our journey to New York! Now, I don't know about you, but I CANNOT SLEEP IN MOVING VEHICLES. Not cars, not airplanes, not busses. So I worked for a couple hours trying to get our device working until my laptop's battery died, after which I tried desperately to sleep, but to no avail.

Finally we reach Chinatown in New York -- first half of our trip is over! Yay! Both my boss and I are extremely hungry and, more importantly, need a place to plug in our laptops so we can continue working. But the only place in Chinatown that was open at 4:00 in the morning was this extremely sketchy hole-in-the-wall Chinese ethnic food place that had clearly not been cleaned in a while. And this was no Americanized Chinese restaurant -- this was a place even my very open-minded Chinese-American boss was revolted by. It's not like we had a choice though, so we went in, plugged our computers in, ordered a couple bowls of what might have been soup, and started working on our device again. At 4:00 in the morning, with no sleep. It was in this little hole-in-the-wall eatery that we finally got our device working well enough that it could be demoed at the conference.

Eventually 6:30 rolls around and we get on the bus to Boston. The rest of the trip to Boston is uneventful -- either that or I have blocked out the memory of something incredibly aweful. I still couldn't sleep a wink.

So we get to the conference in Boston. There, the first thing we do is show our device to a small group of people who go, "Ooh, that's cool! But you shouldn't show it to anyone here because they will steal your ideas." So yeah, our whole reason for going to the conference in the first place was pretty much moot.

link|flag
3  
+1 for the Chinatown bus from Baltimore. Good times, just gotta throw some elbows. – Mike Robinson Apr 13 at 21:01
show 2 more comments
vote up 30 vote down

Big Java Project and Notepad to code with. And horrible RAM on the machine. Restricted browsing.

link|flag
31  
You had me at Java – Scott W. Apr 12 at 19:23
3  
That sounds like any programming setup circa 1995. What's the big deal? – Barry Brown Apr 12 at 19:28
1  
notepad only is inhumane! – Jeff Atwood Apr 13 at 7:23
1  
@Barry - Happened in 2005 :) @Jottos - I was using vi remotely telnetted ... the bad bandwith had its own share of problems – Abhishek Ghose Apr 13 at 7:46
show 5 more comments
vote up 24 vote down

annoying boss, irritating background music? i have you guys beat hands down. My company makes a sensor that uses lasers to shoot across power plant boilers and measures the chemical composition inside. one day i discovered a bug in the LabView code that we used to align the laser. I had to fix it there on the steel grating floor 200 ft above the ground in 120 degree, asbestos riddled air. Not to mention how annoying it is to edit LabView with a track pad and small laptop monitor.

Edit:

i forgot to mention the deafening sound generated by those power plants only broken by the occasional high pitched 1950's era buzzer that signifies some unknown danger.

link|flag
1  
Agreed, almost everyone here is a sad little whiner. Wah, I'm not in the zone because you interrupted me...might as well need their diapers changed. If there's no risk of death if you slip while you're coding, it doesn't quality as bad on my scale--I used to debug and fix kernel code from the top of a roof ladder. You and the guy who coded under mortar fire get my only votes. – Greg Smith Sep 4 at 21:22
vote up 23 vote down

This chair is as uncomfortable as it looks (I had chronic leg pain that went away once I got a better chair), yet more comfortable than the rest of the chairs at one of the places I worked at. My boss had an Aeron though.

Oh, also, I had to implement Sharepoint.

link|flag
2  
Doesn't look THAT bad! – Mark Apr 13 at 22:17
2  
I was thinking 'luxury' until you mentioned Sharepoint. Shudders – lagerdalek Apr 14 at 3:53
show 2 more comments
vote up 22 vote down

my ex boss had a rich father and came from a business family background. he had done is mba in marketing. like many other wanna be tech guys, he knew nothing about technology so he tried to apply his mba brains with programmers (UNSUCCESSFULLY)

can u imagine, as coders, we were expected to wear ties and write code (and in mumbai, india temperatures during the day can cross 35 degrees celcius)

to request a tech book from our library, we had to email 3 people and there was a 3 tier approval system. you were not supposed to take the book home. even to request for a pen, we had to email 3 guys, and my ex boss was busy approving pen requests (which cost about 0.1 usd per piece here)

i think considering our salaries, he spent a lot more approving 0.1 usd pen requests over email than to actually distribute 100s of such pens free ;-)

link|flag
2  
The "Pointy-Haired Boss" meme may be of US origin, but I'm confident that incompetent/myopic leadership is as old as the human race. – A. Levy Apr 13 at 21:35
show 9 more comments
vote up 22 vote down

At a data warehousing consultancy gig with a major British retailer (who has recently gone bust, I am pleased to say) my "desk" was the top of the office laser printer. Both the client and my employer seemed suprised when I resigned.

Another bad one, though not involving me writing code, was teaching a bunch of guys C++ out in the New Forest (a national park in the south of the UK). The site was surrounded by trees and in each tree was a hornets nest. The weather was boiling hot so we had to have the windows wide open, and the hornets came through in droves. I'm mildly phobic regarding wasps (and as it turns out, hornets - I don't mind bees) and standing in front of a class of eager would be C++ programmers while a swarm of stinging insects hovered around me tested my cool not a bit.

On the same gig, I told the trainees to investigate what happens when C++ runs out of memory, by allocating some gigamtic arrays. What I did't know was that the UNIX box we were using was actually a production server (don't ask) and the admins had removed all per-user memory limits (don't ask). So the box immediately froze solid & many shouty people converged on the training room...

link|flag
show 4 more comments
vote up 20 vote down

I once had a contract embedded development position where I worked at a steel desk on a factory floor.

This factory was in the mid-western U.S. and the facility manufactured enormous earth-moving and excavating equipment. There aren't too many players, and they're all pretty close to each other, I'm sure most of you can narrow down the list of suspects.

The company was trying to add intelligence to their $300K+ machines (this was 12-13 years ago) so they had some pretty cool embedded processor work to do.

Anyway, between the diesel fumes, the noise of huge diesel engines being fired up, manufacturing noise, and the fact that I was literally looking through impact resistant safety glasses at my monitor for 8 hours a day (required since we were on the factory floor -- if you were ever caught w/o eye protection, it could be grounds for dismissal.)

Anyway the job paid well, it was marginally interesting, and at least I didn't lose any limbs (although the first summer I was there, a union worker lost a hand about 30 meters away from my desk, I could describe some things but this is a family show....)

Like someone else said above, somewhat sadly, this is a true story....

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 18 vote down

My first programming job, I had to work in the garage of my employer. Through the winter with only a tiny little electric fan heater - the garage was not insulated. Eventually I got the flu and I had to take 4 weeks off work. When I came back they moved me into the lounge with the other programmers.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 18 vote down

Working for a consultancy firm....implementing sharepoint

link|flag
3  
I feel ya. Sharepoint drove me straight out of using Wintel, probably forever. There are a lot of Sharepoint lovers here at SO though, and they downvote like crazy. – deadprogrammer Apr 13 at 12:23
1  
Yep, especially if there's no good story. – Alex Angas Apr 14 at 20:40
show 1 more comment
vote up 18 vote down

Worked as a freelance developer for a non-IT company once. My office was shared with 3 women secretaries who fit their stereotype perfectly. Apart from the incessant gossip, nattering, occasional tears due to domestic problems at home, this office was a magnet for all the other women in the office who would come to discuss what happened on yesterday's soap operas, their husbands, boyfriends and of course their newborns. I also had to endure nail filing, nail polishing and women bringing toddlers to work for a day.

Being neither incredibly handsome or rich, I was considered part of the furniture, sometimes less so when I would come to find my chair being used to hold their handbags. Eventually found that the only way of working in the office was to play black metal albums non-stop while coding.

The cherry on the cake was a pointy hair "veteran" MBA manager who was disgusted that I hadn't finished a 3-month project after one week, since (in his own words) "modern programming just lots of point and click".

link|flag
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 15 vote down

I work at a hunting-supply website, and there are guys constantly practicing their turkey calls within 20 feet of me.

If you aren't familiar with a turkey-call, Google it, then up vote me. (It's a little devise, not them squealing in a high-pitch voice, although that would also be annoying.)


Youtube Link

link|flag
vote up 13 vote down

I recall a test flight for data acquisition software where, while on the aircraft, I was looking for the cause and workaround of a bug that didn't manifest itself in the simulator so we didn't have to land to save on fuel - which meant I had to find a workaround in less than 10 minutes - with high turbulence, sharp turns, and a weak stomach :(

link|flag
1  
And did you succeed? – Mark Apr 13 at 22:15
3  
Yes, I did, we didn't have to land, thank goodness. The problem was due to a shift in (rf) frequency from the ground station above and beyond doppler that wasn't being accounted for. Work around was to "relock" manually. – paquetp Apr 14 at 3:37
vote up 13 vote down

I got my first job at age fourteen. FoxPro. Nine years later, I was doing the same job. FoxPro. Twenty-three years old. New Orleans.

Boldness and rashness are much the same thing to a young man. One Christmas I decided to drop everything and move to New York. I had a friend who was moving to Philly, and he had room for one more box. I left my computer and brought my forty-pound Underwood typewriter.

I was constantly broke.

My good friend back home, who had co-founded a startup, offered me some work in ASP.NET. All I needed was a workstation.

My dad shipped me my old IBM, which promptly broke. So I got a laptop on credit. But I had no internet. So I started walking from Williamsburg to an internet cafe in Manhattan. After a while, they told me, dude, you can't just be here all day every day. I left and never showed my face there again.

My roommate had the solution. He had just graduated from Stern (so he was way more broke than I was), and he said that I could use his account in the computer lab. All I had to do was look like a six-foot-five, bald Uruguayan.

It worked! And I didn't mind the walk.

But every day I dreaded going by the security guard with Mario's ID, descending two floors underground and hoping to find a terminal, only so that I could work on a completely unfamiliar stack, where I couldn't ask anyone for help because I wasn't supposed to be there.

link|flag
show 2 more comments
vote up 10 vote down

A restaurant moved in on the other side of the paper-thin wall separating my office from their half of the building.

  1. Thumping subwoofer bass.
  2. The overwhelming smell of bacon grease.
  3. Workers loudly talking about the intricacies of carrying heavy boxes and running the vacuum properly; their vocabulary consists entirely of profanities.
  4. The occasional (i.e. constant) clanging or shattering plate or glass just to keep me on my toes.
  5. Oh and a few dozen babbling, hungry customers.

The music is what kills me though. You can't drown it out and can't ignore it. 50% of my productivity is gone right there. Another 25% once the headache kicks in.

link|flag
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 8 vote down

I was once told I couldn't use lambdas in any code. Didn't last long, but still...

link|flag
10  
That's because lambdas are the Forbidden Code! Oh no wait, that's the lambada.. – Jeff Atwood Apr 12 at 12:33
1  
One, two, three. PUSH. One, two, three. POP. One, two, three. EXIT. – voyager Apr 12 at 15:48
3  
That's Lamaze, voyager. – GoatRider Apr 13 at 1:28
1  
What an awesome triptych of comments those first three were! – lagerdalek Apr 14 at 3:54
show 1 more comment
vote up 7 vote down

I had a manager who yelled at me in front of everybody 3 times in the first 3 weeks; the third time I just packed my stuff up and walked out. He was pissed off because I had not read an Ajax book over the weekend in my free time. However, during the previous week or two, instead of reading a Python book on company time as they were suggesting, I asked for a bona fide project to work on, using the book as a reference, and I finished it, so I'd already saved them time during regular business hours. I think the problem with the manager was he was a "strong" personality, and so am I, but I noticed his team was primarily comprised of people with reserved personalities.

link|flag
show 1 more comment
vote up 7 vote down

Man, where are you guys finding these jobs? I've never had a coding gig that didn't give me a decent pc, a desk/chair/phone, e-mail and internet access, all the coffee I can drink and plenty of goof-off time. I have no diploma or degree in Computer Science either, just work experience.

I think you need to be a little more selective, I've probably turned down more jobs than I've been turned down for.

link|flag
vote up 5 vote down

Has to be right now. Someone his working with a pneumatic drill on the other side of the wall. I'm getting an headache and the wall is shaking. It's driving me nuts.

link|flag
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
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.