Ask HN: What does your room look like?
I'm re-organising my room to make it most productive for my work (which includes some coding). A while back I saw a really interesting section on the Guardian website featuring pictures and descriptions of famous authors' rooms (http://www.guardian.co.uk/books/series/writersrooms). So I thought it would be cool to find out what hackers rooms look like.
What does your room look like?
55 comments
[ 4.5 ms ] story [ 170 ms ] threadAnd after every time I have a serious go at cleaning up, it seems to devolve into something messier...
I usually use markers that have erasers on the end.
edit: my phone can do this
The white couch towards the top-left corner is my workspace - I don't like desks.
Step 1: Empty desk. No cups or paper holders or anything like that
Step 2: Digitalise what can be digitalised, and sort away all papers that are not directly relevant
Step 3: Get 2 baskets, one for unimportant papers, another for papers you have to order. When anything comes in that is not critical, drop them in the basket. Don't keep the basket on your desk, keep it away in your cupboard. We don't push paper that often.
Step 4: Sort the cables out. Tape them, put them away sensibly
Step 6: Get really good lights
Step 7: Get something to play with for when you are thinking. I personally use a 50 cm wooden ruler, and apart from my PC and a pen, that's the only thing on my desk. If I did not have it, I'd have chewed the pen dead by now.
When you work with a clean desk things feel a lot tidier. When you have stuff on the desk, only when they are extremly high priority. Having a neat desk will make you focus even better on the stuff that is important when it does come on your desk.
And if you have a desktop, consider moving it somewhere else. I keep mine in the closet and use it via network - that way I have some quiet.
So, my suggestion is to plan in a way that it gets difficult to get untidy.
I used to use a German "5 mark" coin, but lost it in a move a few years back.
Newsreading is at home, a desk in a very small efficiency.
Writing (academic) is at on or two coffee shops downtown.
Research is at the CS dept, a desk with my sun box, 2 monitors, keyboard, space for the laptop, small bookshelf, two drawers and a hanging file folder.
Different work at different locations. Keeps life a little interesting, and it makes each location force different habits. Helps me context switch easier.
http://flickr.com/photos/pauls/sets/72157605398490674/
That's when I was moving in, I have a more civilized setup now:
http://paulstamatiou.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/09/pstam_ap... http://farm4.static.flickr.com/3164/2831665151_83a0df503d.jp...
But gotta ask, what's with the all the separate pieces of paper on the table? I assume it's a game of some sort, considering the amount of different beverage glasses... can't figure out what game.
Cheers
I love the tidy motif. If you're the kind of person to do basic electrical hacking it's trivial to modify that ikea lamp (top left corner) to run the power cord all the way to the bottom inside the frame tube. If you cut the wire at the switch, and disassemble it at the break above the wire hole, you can snake the cord end through the base of the lamp up to the top of the stem and repair the wire cleanly so it fits in the tube.
I did it to a pair of mine and was quite pleased with the results. Unfortunately I didn't bring the lamp with me when I moved across the country, so I can't show you pictures of what I did.
How did you snake it through the floor? Or are you suggesting to make a small hole directly behind the lamp in the wall?
Have a three point desk, all have some crap on them, the main one has the monitor and keyboard, also a water bottle and a bottle of ginger ale. The connecting piece has a laptop and empty water bottles(I drink it religiously ever since I passed my first kidney stone). The main piece has mostly crap like empty CDs, digital camera, phone, some documents, a few books, and the speakers and the computer.
To the right of that I have a drawer with a lamp, phone charger, and more documents.
To the right of that I have an unmade bed and a fan aimed downward.
The other half of the room has the FAX/Printer/Copier on the left side. A cabinet with a bunch of books, and to the right side of that a hamper and the closet. Also have an unhooked fridge from my college days which I always put off hooking up.
On the messiness scale, I'd say its a 7...meaning its a mess, but I can clean it up in about 10 minutes if I have to.
I've long been interested in Dahl and his work area.
He did his writing in a shed in the back yard of his house, Gypsy House ~ http://www.flickr.com/photos/bootload/2837817746/ The description of the setup is fascinating. The shed contained an old chair. His feet would rest on a his an old suitcase his mother had discarded. On his lap would be a large board that he would sit over his lap. Within his reach would be half a dozen sharpened pencils and some writing pads. This is all he needed to write. You can see some images of the setup here ~ http://www.flickr.com/photos/bootload/2837817764/ here ~ http://www.flickr.com/photos/bootload/2837817762/ As for my work area isn't a patch on Dahls. An overview you can view here ~ http://flickr.com/photos/bootload/sets/1131207/
Programming is much like writing. You need the solitary (confinement) to get into the flow. You can learn a thing or two emulating past masters. Dahl recongnised that to write you need the discipline of regular practice in an environment free from distraction.
Actually, my room is fairly full of electronics stuff: oscilloscopes, computer hardware, small electronics tools. I'm too ashamed of the mess to show it, as I haven't cracked the organization aspect yet. Insofar as I have, I'd say small organizers for binnable items (LEDs, resistors, little rubber feet), and pegboard for cable management under the desk, and horizontal surfaces (layered when possible) seem to be key to making it work. I would say having a place for everything is 90% of it and keeping everything in said place is 10%.
After: http://fuzzyshot.com/dkokelley/post/HQsw5xt2yd/photo/1ZSu6IQ...
And the desk: http://fuzzyshot.com/dkokelley/post/vDo6FGezfF/photo/TRLWCje...
It's a little private (it's my room), but I figure it would be neat to share here. Having things organized helps me to think, and my room was not organized (but now it is).
Some background info: I live at home while I'm going to school. My brother just moved out (we shared that room, and the desk was where his computer used to go), so I now have 'ownership' over that room, meaning I can't expect anyone else to mess up or clean the room but myself, so I'd better make sure it's clean.
Finally: The mess on the top of the bed is stuff that belongs to my brother, so I can't really clean it up. He'll get it later. Also, there's a closet to the right that isn't as clean as the rest of the room. I just shut the doors when I want to think.
Posted once before in the "screen shots" thread. Seems appropriate here as well.
http://www.jonandkarrie.com/images/P8087198.JPG
that way i no longer need chair+table (i sit on the bed and readjust the shelf's height to put my laptop on)
You're number 1!
Mostly, the desk doesn't have a lot of visual distractions. It's there chiefly for thinking, and I think a clean space helps thinking. The only major features are books, and those 1) put me in the thinking mood and 2) are occasionally consulted. Other posters have commented on the value of a plaything; I often have a squeeze ball to relieve stress and keep my arm from cramping, as well as a fountain pen, but otherwise it's clear.
http://badcheese.com/~steve/gallery/albums/userpics/10003/no...
http://gallery.me.com/binjured#100016&view=grid&bgco...
The station with 4 screens is Dan's; the silver one is actually a TV so he can watch Foosball and other dumb sports. The one with the two mounted screens is mine; basically everything you see there I highly, highly recommend to all hackers.
We have two whiteboards that have been invaluable (go to Home Depot and have them cut some board for you, it's super cheap!). I recently got a desk upgrade, thank god, and actually have some empty space on it now... mmmmm, empty space!
The couch is for laptop-based hacking while watching pretty HD TV and movies. Photos care of my grainy iPhone camera, sorry :(
I don't have a "room". I have a futon in a shared office room in the house I live in, some homemade bookshelves (read wood, eyelet screws and twine), and a laptop. In this same room there is also a silkscreening station.
http://disk.jrock.us/bingo/public/random/desk.jpg
Basically monitor + model m + tea == happiness.