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I could deal with monitors on telescoping arms - that would keep them off the desk. And the large display might work, but I've worked on laptops for so long that I have become accustomed to being 18-24" away from the displays. Hmm.
I just think - correction - I know the heirloom quality office furniture (solid oak and very well made) is made for a real office environment and not for computers. I cannot bring myself to let it out of the family. Yeah, I have issues.
Part of my problem is that as I type this, I am facing the one complete wall in the room. To my right, I have about 70% of a wall, but there is the door that leads to the kitchen. To my left is the front of the house with two large floor to cieling windows, and the back wall behind me has another door that leads out into the entry way of the house. So, lots of light but broken up by openings.
I'll keep going through pictures.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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Sounds like a challenging workspace to organize. Good luck!
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
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ty. I have an artsy/designer daughter. I'm going to hire her.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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A powerful Dell laptop on the right, two large high res'ish monitors front and left, router, VOIP, 24 port router, printer on top of one short bookcase, More bookcases with some technical books that I like to hang on to as they are not about specific technologies (for example, animation and physics of things like billiard balls), a whole lot of books on spiritual science (yes, I'm an Anthroposophist), books on D&D, some classic sci-fi/fantasy books I don't want to part with, 30 or so Steiff animals that are as old as I am, and another shelf full of weird things my client has sent me over the years - fingerprint readers, barcode scanners, custom hardware, numerous rPI's that I want to get back to playing with at some point, a couple NUC's, and cables, cables, cables. The desk is L-shaped and there's a fuzzy blanket on the L part of the desk for the cat to sleep on while I work.
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Marc Clifton wrote: for the cat to sleep on supervise while I work.
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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My cat approves of your correction!
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Do you just let the cables be or contain them in some way?
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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The cables mostly run behind things. It's the power (AC and DC ends) that are the ugly things, and I try to neaten them up with zipties and bundling the cords into their minimum length requirements.
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Nothing more than a laptop, a recliner a black lab by my side in a mountain cabin with screaming internet.
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I hate you . Not really.
I work in the northern Atlanta area - think 60 miles north of downtown. You could not pay me enough to live down there. Since Covid, I've been working a lot at home like almost 4 of 5 days a week. And I regularly ask myself why I'm not living about 60 miles north (which would put in the Georgia mountains). Sort of stuck at the homestead at the moment.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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Sounds like heaven... I'm super jealous.
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My home office is really messy, piles of old notes, laptops, tablets, etc. I have a small area with an extra chair used by my colleague when she is in town.
I intend to clean it up over the holiday break. I need to figure out what to do with a bookshelf full of old manuals and reference guides that mostly predate Google and are certainly no longer relevant...maybe a bonfire!
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
"Hope is contagious"
modified 3-Dec-22 14:43pm.
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kmoorevs wrote: maybe a bonfire!
Let's get together so I can add all of my outdated computer books to the fire!
The difficult we do right away...
...the impossible takes slightly longer.
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Me too. Cleaning the office.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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I've worked from home for over 20 years. It used to be: L-shaped desk with drawers under long side for bank statements, signed contracts, specs (filed in hanging folders alphabetically by client), envelopes, copy invoices etc. Underneath was a mini-tower and a server. On top, a laptop, Mac Mini, 2x wall-mounted 17" monitors, in-tray / out-tray, notepad, pens etc and keyboards for the mini-tower machine, the server and the Mac. Router for everything (most wires going through under the desk) and on a separate shelf a multi-function printer / scanner / fax / phone. A separate unit held old hardware, cables, printer supplies, CDs and DVDs and a 14" monitor for the server. This was all in one corner of a rather large hobby/office room with a full side taken up with bookshelves and model railway, and a walk-in toy cupboard at the end. Big french windows onto the patio open when warm. See here[^]
These days 99.9% of the time I just work on the sofa in the living room, with a laptop on my knee. Haven't used the server, Mac or mini-tower in years. Times change.
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I have most of the (finished) basement as my "office"; about 700 square feet. Have been able to claim it as an expense for tax purposes (self employed), though the insurance company balks at anything over 150 square feet for a "home" office: "Are you running a server farm?". No, I just have a lot of shelves, PC hardware, desks (one for circuit boards), printer, shredder, etc.
Most of the furniture is from IKEA; since you can sort of design your own and it's easy to take apart and move around if you need to.
I don't like putting machines on the floor, so everyone gets a desk or (kitchen) cart.
Major benefit of the basement - stays cool.
"Before entering on an understanding, I have meditated for a long time, and have foreseen what might happen. It is not genius which reveals to me suddenly, secretly, what I have to say or to do in a circumstance unexpected by other people; it is reflection, it is meditation." - Napoleon I
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I live in a small apartment.
My computer desk is in the living room.
Originally, it was my gaming space.
Now it's my Office/Gaming room (for the last 3 years, dear god, has it really been nearly 3 years !??!!)
I never really upgraded anything (except for the chair), but I really should.
CI/CD = Continuous Impediment/Continuous Despair
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I've never been much bothered by disparate things being in a space together, but my son is. He is very proficient in the design of objects built by his 3D printer, so his solution always begins there. He has designed many visually attractive containers and conduits tailored to specific needs, from a planet that holds cords, to a caddy for a variety of tea bags. When the item is too large for printing, he uses other lightweight materials like balsa wood, clear fishing line, and LED tape for a hanging light array over his workspace.
My advice: sit in the space and dream without judgement. Imagine all sorts of things that are silly and springboard from one to another until you get one that keeps coming back. Have fun.
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You have a blossoming consulting career
Excellent thoughts.
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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My office is around 12x10 in size, I think. We only measured it when we moved in around 28 years ago.
I have two desks; one, my large office and primary desk, and a second, smaller one, diagonally behind me.
I work on my laptop on my large desk mostly. It is simply more comfortable than with my workstation.
With my workstation, which is set up on my smaller desk, I have a 32inch LG flat screen. As a result, I mostly use my workstation for my flight simulations.
Surrounding me are literally scores of books mostly on my other interest, military history. They are all stuffed into areas on the floor and shelves that surround me against three walls.
I also have a brood of stuffed animals sitting about. My wife and I have always had a thing for Teddy Bears.
Most of our inorganic friends showed up from places we have no idea of.
We also have 3 aging cats. One is close to 20 and the other 2 are both 17.
Between the Teddy Bears arguing among each other and the cats making demands, it can get pretty noisy in there...
Steve Naidamast
Sr. Software Engineer
Black Falcon Software, Inc.
blackfalconsoftware@outlook.com
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An Alienware Aurora R13 desktop to the left of the coding desk sitting on top of an APC 2200 UPS. Alienware laptop sitting on the right side of the coding desk. 4 large 38" Alienware curved Monitors in a 2x2 configuration between the 2 computer systems mounted to the wall with telescoping/adjustable arms. ShareMouse application to use both systems with a single mouse and keyboard. The desktop owns the left 2 monitors and the laptop owns the right 2 monitors plus its own embedded screen. Total of 5 monitors and all being used for various development/testing activities. Goodsync software to sync both development systems.
Printer/routers/NAS to the rear sitting on a filing cabinet behind where I sit.
modified 5-Dec-22 12:58pm.
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I have an office at a commercial location, but I took the time decades ago to build a custom furniture system, custom desk, cabinets, all in ergonomic and fashionable design and colors. I have a corner system with a very large corner desk, with a cutout to face the corner. And up above I have a long custom shelve that holds barcode printers, phones, radio, color printer. Down below is two 27" pieces of glass with a 3rd 24" glass that wraps around the desk. Ergonomic keyboard tray that supports wrist. I can plug in devices straight into my Das Pro 6 keyboard or front of my computer. All the printers are Networked and not USB.
I'm in the process of creating a 2nd work space in the garage, so I can be closer to some of my projects. I don't have a computer at home, well just an iPad Max and Dell Notebook that I don't use anymore. But the purpose of this 2nd environment is to be able to get away from my primary environment. Most of my ideas come from the garage, so now I can fire up a computer at home and work on other customer projects and of course my projects.
I bought a UpLift Desk this week, to sort of double as a computer desk and work bench if I need to work on things. I got all the bells and whistles and it's fully loaded. And I bought a new Sonic tool storage system that is smaller and taller, along with new modern tools for automotive work. Then I'm going to paint the walls, put in new lighting, and more cabinets to store things. This is my Garage 2.0 Project I finally committed to and the work begins this weekend.
Go on YouTube, and search home office makeovers, or coders keyboards. I was surprised at how many videos there are for FANG employees working from home and how they choose there setup, decorated, monitor glass, computer, keyboards, and painted while adding textures. There is one Asian kid that does nothing but home office makeovers and he's really good at it. I took some of his ideas for my Garage 2.0 Upgrade like the UpLift desk, and some of his wall storage systems.
If it ain't broke don't fix it
Discover my world at jkirkerx.com
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Suggesting youtube is an outstanding idea - hadn't considered going there at all.
Thank you
Charlie Gilley
“They who can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety.” BF, 1759
Has never been more appropriate.
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I've been wanting to upgrade my garage, and bring home my old computer workstation to use in the garage, so I can have a 2nd environment to work in. And all the topics ranging from what color to paint the walls, what kind of lighting I should use, even down to how to calculate how many lights to buy and placement was on YouTube.
If you got the money, you could hire a custom furniture guy, the kind of furniture you see in banks like the teller stations and offices that have been customized like the reception area, and have a custom system built and installed. That's the route that I took for my commercial office. I use to be a contractor and worked on custom offices, hotels, and luxury resorts and ran into these guys all the time. One company did a trade with me, and built my furniture with custom laminate colors. All I had to do was take the measurements, draw it up and email it over to them. I had one customer that had the colors I liked, and their designer gave me the color codes, down to the carpet color and pattern. It was quite easy and worth every penny I paid.
If it ain't broke don't fix it
Discover my world at jkirkerx.com
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I appreciate the newer C++ standards like C++20 even though I haven't really done more than scratch the surface of it yet.
But one thing I have mixed feelings about is promoting STL things as part of the first class language features, like (an older but good example) for(:) .
I have qualms about The STL, primarily around the way it uses memory, almost guaranteeing you need custom allocators and a custom heap for anything without gobs of RAM. Otherwise, fragmentation will nail you.
I *think* most of it works like C# where it's not explicitly tied to the library - as long as a separate library exposes the same features it will bind to it like foreach in C#. I'm good with that.
I just fear how far they are going to take it. How many features will a container eventually have to expose to take advantage of all the available language features that act on them for example?
Also, it feels like less of a mid level language now. I'm not sure how I feel about that.
To err is human. Fortune favors the monsters.
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