vote up 74 vote down star
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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.

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For me it is the constant chattings of other colleagues that prevent me very effectively from being concentrated. – User Apr 12 at 11:48
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You're all misery guts. Reopen!! I really like this one. – kronoz Apr 12 at 22:11
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It is occasionally OK to have questions like this, IMO – Jeff Atwood Apr 13 at 6:24
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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
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On an ocean liner that was upside down, with Gene Hackman, Ernest Borgnine, Roddy McDowall, and Shelley Winters. – Nosredna Jul 14 at 1:53
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77 Answers

vote up 0 vote down

I was trying to repair some TV Station software at a station in Toronto, Canada. They put me in the back of a dark studio while they interviewed Meredith Brooks. Her only claim to fame is singing the song "I'm a Bitch."

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vote up 0 vote down

I work in the basement of a building. In the room I work in there are four people in a room big enough for two. One of the people is the head banging pc repair tech who likes to talk a lot about things like emulators and "hackers". The rest (including me are computer engineers) of us are usually doing some software related project. The company is only 9 people including the owners wife who interrupts me about 15 times a day by asking "Can I interrupt you" so that I can do her marketing work for her.

I have no server to back stuff up on. There is no schedule, design meetings or anything remotely close to order. The current software project I am working on was written by many many different people over a long period of time with no supervision or collaboration (none of those people are here now). All of the people were masters students and had no training in VC++ coding and GUI software design, very important variables and functions are named: tt ttt k hmix m_pyt

There is no MVC or OOP respect, everything is a free for all. I also get the feeling that if I just rewrote the whole thing it would take me a max of 3 months by myself.That fact is not helping me when I labour over making the smallest changes (the current feature I am adding should have taken 3 days...I am on my third week).

Even if you know what the program was supposed to do you cannot imagine what these people were thinking. It is hopeless. My job is hopeless. This was supposed to be cathartic. :P

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vote up 46 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.

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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
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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
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vote up 14 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

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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".

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vote up 4 vote down

I used to work for a small company, in a small desk, doing hardware assistance for ugly old and young womans with no computer knowledge at all, some pretending to know computer stuff but using the CAPS key to hit just one capital letter. They eventually discovered I'm also a fairly good programmer, and assigned me a complicated task, which I had to bring it on my own, with no outside help, on that small desk, with continue interruptions for trivial things, disco music in the room, no UPS, frequent power loss and related work loss, no versioning system, undocumented proprietary API, no time for proper testing and another person occasionally peeking the code, doing undocumented charges, and letting me again alone to live with that.

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vote up 0 vote down

I used to work at a place where the boss used to heap lavish praises on people staying late or for putting very long hours even if there was no real work to do in office. It was not uncommon to see people snoring loudly sitting in front of their computers, which would have been OK if you did not have to share your cubicle with many others.

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vote up 0 vote down

Probably the worst productivity-wise was the time I had a cubicle with my back to a very high-traffic hall. Behind the hall was not more cubicles, but rather the company machine shop. It sounded exactly like Godzilla was rampaging back there all day. And of course this company also had the paging system, so that I could be interrupted whenever any one of my 500+ co-workers wanted to talk to another one.

I had one other place where my cubicle was so small I used to go sit and read in the handicapped stall in the bathroom. Thanks to government regulation, it was way bigger than my cube.

I did interview for one other job that had even higher sucky-ness potential though. The main issue was that the work site was at a secret facility somewhere out in the Nevada desert (Top Secret clearance required). No outside contact with your family or anyone while you are there. There was one flight a day out to this place, on a plane with the windows blacked out so you can't see where they are taking you. If you miss the flight, no work for you that day. If you miss the flight back, well...don't miss the flight back.

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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.

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vote up 45 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.

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"They never used it!" – Manoj Jun 3 at 6:40
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vote up 1 vote down

I had a job working for this company Initech, my boss hooked up with my girlfriend while I was coding on my mac, his name was Lumbergh. My only red stapler that I liked he took it away and then moved me to the basement with a single desk. Then some dude tried to sell me a jump to conclusions map. I didn't get any cake either for a birthday party hosted at work. Anyway, long story short, I found a check in my bosses office and moved to the islands after a significant event happened at work.

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Is no-one getting the 'Office space' reference? I found it funny. – Sardaukar Apr 14 at 7:44
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vote up 2 vote down

I once worked in the middle of a major city in the Southeast US during a summer at this place I could only describe as a coding chop-shop. My boss lived and worked 2 states away and was extremely difficult to get ahold of and hard to get specs out of.

In addition the heat was around 98 degrees F (~37 C), with humidity often in the 70-80% range. We didn't have an air-conditioned office, I had a spot in the front room of an old Victorian style house.

My desk was a rickety wooden table (if you bumped it one of the legs would collapse) and I sat in one of those cheap fabric office chairs that looked like someone had eaten a chunk out of the foam armrests.

Since it was an old house it wasn't sealed well and mosquitoes constantly came in through the windows and door cracks and bit me the entire time I was trying to work. We had to park on the street of this residential neighborhood and I came out one day to find my car covered with ants (inside and out).

Every morning and evening I had about an hour long commute in heavy traffic and at the time I was driving a small stick-shift car with no A/C.

On top of all that I was working in ASP.NET 1.0 (VB of course) and often had to do things like write code and debug via a remote session during Netmeeting sessions with the client watching everything I typed on some big projector in their office. This would regularly occur every couple of weeks as we rolled out a new "version" to the client.

To add insult to injury they eventually gave me a bad review and fired me because while they told me I wrote high quality code, they were more "productivity-oriented" and needed someone who would just vomit out code without worrying about readability or reuse.

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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.

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vote up 4 vote down

I showed up for work at my new defense contracting assignment at a gov't facility and was shown to a desk in the hallway with a computer on it. There was a TV not 10 feet away from me. People would constantly unmute it to watch whatever FOX News was blathering about at the moment, then walk away without muting it again.

There was a big double door that was the entrance to our space not 20 feet away from me that crashed shut every time someone left or came in, which was about every five minutes.

Top it all off with my computer being on a classified LAN which meant I had to go to a different part of the installation every time I needed to access the public internet or Google something. Not the most constructive working environment, no iPods or music or anything to help mute the distractions. I think I lasted about a month.

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vote up 30 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.

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+1 for the Chinatown bus from Baltimore. Good times, just gotta throw some elbows. – Mike Robinson Apr 13 at 21:01
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vote up 2 vote down

there are two situations that i consider the worst i ever have

Once i have to code in a room in the subterrain parking lot of a corporative bank , with no ventilation, no windows , no water , no cellphone or radio signal , no music and no aconditioned air, literally my boss in that moment just left us there (yes there code more people in the room) with pizza, cola drinks , coffee at 7:00 am and pick us off there at 1:00 or 2:00 am on next day

The other is more like the actual condition where my place is near to the security officer that is the more annoying person in the world is like you are working in a freaking mall full of yields and low categorie music

other condition that puts pressure on my but was fun is try to code with my 8 months son at my side as i cant write a single line im not consider it as "coding situation"

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vote up 4 vote down

We had a single development server (Win2003 which allows 2 connections), a VPN with 3 users and 5 developers. Three of us would literally stare at the wall while two developers were on the machine. We were developing SharePoint on a Virtual Machine with 2 GB RAM. Once on the machine iisreset would come frequently, so development was impossibly slow. The other developers were fond of overwriting config files, or back/restore iis so I had to make the same changes over and over, sometimes during the same coding session. Not all bad... I contributed to many open source projects during this time and was paid for it :)

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vote up 4 vote down

I worked at a place that basically worked everyone to death. I had MANDITORY coding meetings shceduled at 7pm, and you had to show up at 8am sharp or else you got a call! WTF?! Stayed there 3 months before I said SeeYa! Suprised I stayed that long, would of been two months but they asked for 3 weeks of notice, I am too generous.

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vote up 35 vote down

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

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Nobody said life is fair. – Gamecat Apr 16 at 11:32
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Couldn't have been that bad, he was probably answering SO questions all day. – reccles Oct 22 at 14:07
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vote up 0 vote down

My wife once had a job with a sporting goods company. It had some interesting features.

The boss was one of three brothers, and he'd been chosen to do the accounting and such, despite not actually wanting to do it, so he paid little attention. He kept the computer and software manuals in his office, which was frequently locked.

The person who set the system up was a nice guy, technically competent, but lacking real-world experience. He set the system up with as much high-tech stuff as he could (including a main system with an Intel 80186 - this was some time ago), and left to go to school somewhere a thousand miles away or more, with no way of contacting him.

This included setting up the big 40M disk on the main computer. Now, in those days, MS-DOS couldn't handle a disk larger than 32M, so he partitioned it into two, using software he had available, and didn't include as part of the package he left behind.

Therefore, when the disk drive caught fire, with flames coming out of it (probably from filings or metallic dust from the skate-sharpening machine in the next room), nobody knew how to restore the system.

They floundered around for a bit, but my wife wound up leaving, so I never did find out what they did to get going again.

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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.

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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
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What are "great" working conditions? My software (LabVIEW) is used extensively in R&D, industry and manufacturing, and the working conditions are infrequently condusive to getting in the "zone". I've only had two jobs that could have been pleasant. One was working in one huge room with a couple of dozen developers who liked to throw things, have tickle parties (or at least that's what it sounded like) and stand around in groups taling by my cube - my cube was next to the boss's. The other was in another big room sitting next to one guy who slurped his lunch and another who sucked flem up so hard it sounded like he was trying to bring it up from his toes. I've only had a private office once - and that is where I was the most productive.

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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.

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vote up 0 vote down

New year eve, night out in office, alone, coffee machine not working, no single restaurant willing to deliver dinner.....fixing someone's code on a machine that had no necessary tools, no admin rights to install one ....I thought I am an e-slave!!!

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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.

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vote up 3 vote down

I remember having to work in a big room: a"loft" as they call these big flats with no separate rooms. There were about 20 wooden desktops there, spread across the big room. Marketing, Sales, Programmers, Bosses all there. It was the "Bubble" era. Cool places… or maybe not.

You can imagine how hard was to concentrate in that place. All of a sudden, the air conditioning broke.

Temp 40ºC.

Noise.

Bad chairs.

More Noise.

Phones ringing.

The computers were "ok" for the time (Windows 2000), this was 2001. Kind of a programming odyssey…

I got fired for complaining about all that every day.

:)

Never been happier.

Oh, and it was ASP 2.0 (not .net) with VBScript!

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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.

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Doesn't look THAT bad! – Mark Apr 13 at 22:17
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I was thinking 'luxury' until you mentioned Sharepoint. Shudders – lagerdalek Apr 14 at 3:53
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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.

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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....

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vote up -2 vote down

Mine is a cool one:

I have my home ADSL connected to the net, and from college I ssh'ed to the machine twice: one for running dosemu to write x86 code, and the second one to edit the code via vim.

That was cool :)

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