Something I've been thinking about recently...
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I'm not trying to start a flamewar about whether coding is art, architecture or construction. I'm curious about your hobbies... How many of you coders have 'artistic' hobbies such as painting, drawing, carving, composing, writing etc... Do you think that the 'artistic' outlet helps you in your day job? If you don't mind sharing, what are your hobbies?
Painting and playing the guitar, and the artistic outlet keeps me sane.
"WPF has many lovers. It's a veritable porn star!" - Josh Smith
As Braveheart once said, "You can take our freedom but you'll never take our Hobnobs!" - Martin Hughes.
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I made a couple built in bookcases for our house... Need a couple nice standalone cases... I'll just add that to the end of the list of projects for after the house is completed... I may get to it before I die... (The list is very long...) Are you going to use a plan to build the cedar hope chest or 'wing it'?
Matthew Page wrote:
Are you going to use a plan to build the cedar hope chest or 'wing it'?
It depends on if I can find a picture of what I want.
"One man's wage rise is another man's price increase." - Harold Wilson
"Fireproof doesn't mean the fire will never come. It means when the fire comes that you will be able to withstand it." - Michael Simmons
"Man who follows car will be exhausted." - Confucius
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DavidCrow wrote:
Right now I'm adding a room to our garage. I've done everything except texture the walls. I just don't trust myself enough.
If you're unsure of your skills the garage is the perfect place to test them. The impact from a botched job is far lower than anywhere else in the house.
3x12=36 2x12=24 1x12=12 0x12=18
Dan Neely wrote:
If you're unsure of your skills the garage is the perfect place to test them.
I'm not building a garage. The garage was "finished" several years ago into a large play room. I'm simply walling off a corner for a bedroom.
"One man's wage rise is another man's price increase." - Harold Wilson
"Fireproof doesn't mean the fire will never come. It means when the fire comes that you will be able to withstand it." - Michael Simmons
"Man who follows car will be exhausted." - Confucius
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I'm not trying to start a flamewar about whether coding is art, architecture or construction. I'm curious about your hobbies... How many of you coders have 'artistic' hobbies such as painting, drawing, carving, composing, writing etc... Do you think that the 'artistic' outlet helps you in your day job? If you don't mind sharing, what are your hobbies?
Like many software engineers I play a musical instrument (two actually - guitar and piano). /ravi
My new year resolution: 2048 x 1536 Home | Articles | My .NET bits | Freeware ravib(at)ravib(dot)com
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My artistic outlet is wood working[^]. I do believe it helps with the programming, in that I apply my analytical and mathematical talents to three dimensional projects, whilst also releasing a lot of frustration with a hammer ;P
Very impressive, Maurizio! :cool: /ravi
My new year resolution: 2048 x 1536 Home | Articles | My .NET bits | Freeware ravib(at)ravib(dot)com
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I'm not trying to start a flamewar about whether coding is art, architecture or construction. I'm curious about your hobbies... How many of you coders have 'artistic' hobbies such as painting, drawing, carving, composing, writing etc... Do you think that the 'artistic' outlet helps you in your day job? If you don't mind sharing, what are your hobbies?
I like carving with a dremel. I have carved several chess pieces that look pretty good. It's to go along with the chess board I made in a college framming class. I would say that playing chess helps keep my mind open towards finding solutions. I also carved a wood chain with no breaks in the wood. That was pretty fun to do.
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I'm not trying to start a flamewar about whether coding is art, architecture or construction. I'm curious about your hobbies... How many of you coders have 'artistic' hobbies such as painting, drawing, carving, composing, writing etc... Do you think that the 'artistic' outlet helps you in your day job? If you don't mind sharing, what are your hobbies?
I think it helps a lot to have an outside activity completly different than programming. At the end of work day I'm pretty burned out. The last thing I want to do is look at another computer when I get home. For me I like to work on my old hot rod, a 1933 Ford Pickup. What I enjoy is working with the vintage technology and seeing how the old engineers figured out the problems without computers.
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I'm not trying to start a flamewar about whether coding is art, architecture or construction. I'm curious about your hobbies... How many of you coders have 'artistic' hobbies such as painting, drawing, carving, composing, writing etc... Do you think that the 'artistic' outlet helps you in your day job? If you don't mind sharing, what are your hobbies?
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I think guitar is easier than piano, especially the basics.
Christian Graus Driven to the arms of OSX by Vista. Read my blog to find out how I've worked around bugs in Microsoft tools and frameworks.
An old adage about playing guitar is that it's easy to play badly, hard to play well.
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I'm not trying to start a flamewar about whether coding is art, architecture or construction. I'm curious about your hobbies... How many of you coders have 'artistic' hobbies such as painting, drawing, carving, composing, writing etc... Do you think that the 'artistic' outlet helps you in your day job? If you don't mind sharing, what are your hobbies?
Hmm. I'm primarily too interested in too many things. I can sort-of play the violin, I dabble in writing short stories, I build ugly but useful items from wood and now have a forge for building ugly but useful iron items. I'm also playing around with smelting brass. My most loved hobby is, a.t.m. playing with Arduino. Love it.
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I'm not trying to start a flamewar about whether coding is art, architecture or construction. I'm curious about your hobbies... How many of you coders have 'artistic' hobbies such as painting, drawing, carving, composing, writing etc... Do you think that the 'artistic' outlet helps you in your day job? If you don't mind sharing, what are your hobbies?
I am one of those savant types who has the ability to easily master just about activity I put my mind to where logical order is applied to achieve a successful end result, even if it doesn’t appear logical to others. I can play several instruments, Guitar very well, the rest I can play once I figure out the how to make it create noise but hardly consider myself a master. I enjoy building things out of wood and can find my way around a metal shop. Drawing, composing music, programming, repairing electronic devices and appliances and creating mechanical contrivances. Used to do all my own auto repair. (Age dictates that when the physical recovery from doing the work outlasts the time to do the work now means I hire someone else to do it). I think it all boils down to putting things to an order that satisfies you. Or fixing things that are out of order. It is a mindset talent that easily transfers to other activities that require order. If it ain't broke, don't fix it.
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I'm not trying to start a flamewar about whether coding is art, architecture or construction. I'm curious about your hobbies... How many of you coders have 'artistic' hobbies such as painting, drawing, carving, composing, writing etc... Do you think that the 'artistic' outlet helps you in your day job? If you don't mind sharing, what are your hobbies?
I'm a photographer on the side. I really enjoy taking portraits, mostly of families and children.
Paul A .NET developer who now drinks the Ruby and Cocoa Koolaid.
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I'm not trying to start a flamewar about whether coding is art, architecture or construction. I'm curious about your hobbies... How many of you coders have 'artistic' hobbies such as painting, drawing, carving, composing, writing etc... Do you think that the 'artistic' outlet helps you in your day job? If you don't mind sharing, what are your hobbies?
I take one creative class at our local art school every semester - keeps me on track with having a hobby apart from coding! This year I am focusing on drawing. I think having some kind of hobby is necessary to prevent burnout, don't think it has to be creative. I do think developers have a strong creative streak - all the ones I know are either musicians or artists or crafters of some sort.
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I play a bit of guitar. Most programmers I know are musically inclined in one way or another.
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I've been thinking about taking up an instrument... No idea which. Piano or maybe guitar. I think guitar may be to easy though... I can play expert on Rock Band, afterall... *Rolling eyes* (Just ignore me!)
try http://pianocheater.com[^] :-D
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I'm not trying to start a flamewar about whether coding is art, architecture or construction. I'm curious about your hobbies... How many of you coders have 'artistic' hobbies such as painting, drawing, carving, composing, writing etc... Do you think that the 'artistic' outlet helps you in your day job? If you don't mind sharing, what are your hobbies?
Now that I've got the tricky parts of the "Dad" thing down, (Olden kids), I can return to my hobby of programming. Art#1 On a midi sequencer with bits of it like guitar hero, ... but for piano and for REAL. Art#2 http://pianocheater.com/screenshot.html[^] This is in competition with my day job, but, eh, during the 8 hr days the day job has priority. I do notice that when I'm writing some pretty decent code at work, I tend to be doing the same at home. Not sure why the "synchronicity" happens. But I've definitely noticed it. Of course, the work code is pretty booooring in comparison. But, eh, the home code won't pay the mortgage, sooo... whattayagonna do??
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I'm not trying to start a flamewar about whether coding is art, architecture or construction. I'm curious about your hobbies... How many of you coders have 'artistic' hobbies such as painting, drawing, carving, composing, writing etc... Do you think that the 'artistic' outlet helps you in your day job? If you don't mind sharing, what are your hobbies?
I take and art class and I play the violin.
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I'm not trying to start a flamewar about whether coding is art, architecture or construction. I'm curious about your hobbies... How many of you coders have 'artistic' hobbies such as painting, drawing, carving, composing, writing etc... Do you think that the 'artistic' outlet helps you in your day job? If you don't mind sharing, what are your hobbies?
I love play guitar, much more I like coding ... I usually spend all night playing Rock and Roll and drinking, and I`m sure it doesnt help me with my developer tasks on the day after at all... ;P ;P But I think working as developer you can use some creativity much more then other kinds of jobs, as we do in music like improvisation and composing.
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I'm not trying to start a flamewar about whether coding is art, architecture or construction. I'm curious about your hobbies... How many of you coders have 'artistic' hobbies such as painting, drawing, carving, composing, writing etc... Do you think that the 'artistic' outlet helps you in your day job? If you don't mind sharing, what are your hobbies?
I don't know about everyone else, but I find if I don't have a creative outlet and am not learning something new, I'm not happy. Sometimes those aspects get filled through what I'm doing at work, but often not. When work doesn't do it, my hobbies fill the gap. I've been surpised at how my hobbies interact with my day job, sometimes being directly applicable, but often giving me insights I wouldn't have otherwise. Current hobbies are chainmail, diesel mercedes maintence and photography. Past hobbies have been RC cars, woodworking, minor electrical engineering, Linux (back before it was cool and distros were downloaded to thirteen 3.5" floppies), and drawing. Some of the oddest things have applied.. like drawing when I needed some icons and the company couldn't affort to hire an artist, or the RC car interest, when we found an old radio controlled camera platform in a back room and it was essentially a large RC car. Even my photography applied in odd ways. I work for an immersive imaging company, so it applies in an obvious way, but through that hobby I've also learned about color spaces, how to do some pretty sophisticated things in photoshop & gimp, and even some inner workings of the JPG library, all of which have been invaluable in my day job.
patbob
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I'm not trying to start a flamewar about whether coding is art, architecture or construction. I'm curious about your hobbies... How many of you coders have 'artistic' hobbies such as painting, drawing, carving, composing, writing etc... Do you think that the 'artistic' outlet helps you in your day job? If you don't mind sharing, what are your hobbies?