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Worst Developers Machines

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  • M Mark_Wallace

    I think that developers should be issued nothing better than a Pentium 2. That way, when their product goes to market, instead of customers not being able to run it, because it requires the biggest, fastest computers, if it's to to crawl out of its box, it'll go like sh1t off a shovel. Result: Happier customers, and better-paid devs. Suck it in and use the worst one.

    I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

    Q Offline
    Q Offline
    QuiJohn
    wrote on last edited by
    #22

    Mark Wallace wrote:

    I think that developers should be issued nothing better than a Pentium 2.

    Haha, I know what you're saying actually. I have the best dev system here (Core2 Quad with 4GB RAM and 64-bit Windows 7) because I develop the most demanding apps (tons of DSP, and so far a lot of it done on the main CPU). The first couple of times we had major releases of the software we used my machine as the minimum spec (I had a 2.4GHz P4 back then), just to be safe. Of course the software is sold as part of systems that cost $100,000 or more, so specifying a fast PC isn't exactly breaking the budget.


    He said, "Boy I'm just old and lonely, But thank you for your concern, Here's wishing you a Happy New Year." I wished him one back in return.

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    • W wout de zeeuw

      Why not add more memory to it? It's almost free.

      Wout

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      Dave Parker
      wrote on last edited by
      #23

      He keeps getting promised it but it never seems to happen. TBH it was taking me forever to get an upgrade from 1 GB to 2GB through - despite it being almost free it cost way more than just the price of the memory due to all the hours of meetings and performance logging and analysis etc to justify it. Then someone suggested an external RAM drive as an alternative which just delayed the whole thing even more :sigh: Eventually the computer I had went out of the "support" period so I got a brand new one anyway, which has 8 GB of RAM. Pretty sure the other guys has gone way past that point as well so dunno what's going on there.

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      • M Mark_Wallace

        I think that developers should be issued nothing better than a Pentium 2. That way, when their product goes to market, instead of customers not being able to run it, because it requires the biggest, fastest computers, if it's to to crawl out of its box, it'll go like sh1t off a shovel. Result: Happier customers, and better-paid devs. Suck it in and use the worst one.

        I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

        D Offline
        D Offline
        Dave Parker
        wrote on last edited by
        #24

        How many programs actually need to run fast on the CPU though? In everything I've ever worked on the bottleneck has been the machine hosting the database and the network. Even for local standalone software I only ever seem to notice the disk being the bottleneck or sometimes the graphics card with games. We try to test our stuff for performance by having a test application server / database set up on a virtual machine hosted elsewhere on the network, so it's not all running on the same box. There aren't as many users hammering it as the live system but the presence of around 15 other virtual machines on the same box reduces the performance somewhat.

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        • D Dave Parker

          He keeps getting promised it but it never seems to happen. TBH it was taking me forever to get an upgrade from 1 GB to 2GB through - despite it being almost free it cost way more than just the price of the memory due to all the hours of meetings and performance logging and analysis etc to justify it. Then someone suggested an external RAM drive as an alternative which just delayed the whole thing even more :sigh: Eventually the computer I had went out of the "support" period so I got a brand new one anyway, which has 8 GB of RAM. Pretty sure the other guys has gone way past that point as well so dunno what's going on there.

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          W Offline
          wout de zeeuw
          wrote on last edited by
          #25

          Dave Parker wrote:

          Eventually the computer I had went out of the "support" period

          Aha! Will throwing a machine out of the window make it go out of the support period? May still be cheaper than all those meetings.

          Wout

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          • M Mark_Wallace

            Well, I was being just a little bit sarcastic. Mind you, it would probably be better for everyone if games developers had their ankles shackled, so to speak.

            I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

            S Offline
            S Offline
            Simon P Stevens
            wrote on last edited by
            #26

            Doh. At least I can blame the fact that sarcasm and text don't go together well.

            Simon

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            • S Simon P Stevens

              Doh. At least I can blame the fact that sarcasm and text don't go together well.

              Simon

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              M Offline
              Mark_Wallace
              wrote on last edited by
              #27

              Simon P Stevens wrote:

              At least I can blame the fact that sarcasm and text don't go together well.

              You obviously haven't reviewed my code.

              I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

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              • J Jorgen Andersson

                If developers have bad machines they have a better incentive to make efficient code.

                List of common misconceptions

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                F Offline
                fjdiewornncalwe
                wrote on last edited by
                #28

                Wrong. It just means we do a "Rebuild entire solution" more often and go for coffee.

                I wasn't, now I am, then I won't be anymore.

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                • F fjdiewornncalwe

                  Wrong. It just means we do a "Rebuild entire solution" more often and go for coffee.

                  I wasn't, now I am, then I won't be anymore.

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                  J Offline
                  Jorgen Andersson
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #29

                  You make it sound like it is a bad thing.

                  List of common misconceptions

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                  • P peterchen

                    (I hope you are missing the sarcasm icon) Creting efficient code means comparing different versions, run decent timing stats, more test cases, more tests to run etc. A slow machine is the best incentive to make your compiler shut up and let QA sort out the rest.

                    FILETIME to time_t
                    | FoldWithUs! | sighist | WhoIncludes - Analyzing C++ include file hierarchy

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                    Jorgen Andersson
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #30

                    peterchen wrote:

                    (I hope you are missing the sarcasm icon)

                    Make a guess. :rolleyes: On a more serious note, I do believe developers should be forced to regularily test their software on slow machines. But developing on them would be wasting both time and nerves.

                    List of common misconceptions

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                    • J Jorgen Andersson

                      You make it sound like it is a bad thing.

                      List of common misconceptions

                      F Offline
                      F Offline
                      fjdiewornncalwe
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #31

                      Only when something actually needs to get done. :)

                      I wasn't, now I am, then I won't be anymore.

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                      • A Albert Bezzina

                        Hi all, Just out of curiosity which is your worst developer machine? In our room, 3 developers, 10 machines [2 Core2Duo, 2 Pentium D & 6 Pentium 4], the best developers machine is Core2Duo E7300 4Gb ram and the worse machine is: Intel Pentium 4 3.40GHz, 2GB, Time taken to boot a windows server 2008 is 4 minutes. NOTE that in our organization there is an impression that we have the best machines :doh:

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                        Gary Wheeler
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #32

                        My current work machine: Intel Core 2 Duo, 2.66 GHz, 4G RAM. Pathetic, no?

                        Software Zen: delete this;

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                        • A Albert Bezzina

                          Hi all, Just out of curiosity which is your worst developer machine? In our room, 3 developers, 10 machines [2 Core2Duo, 2 Pentium D & 6 Pentium 4], the best developers machine is Core2Duo E7300 4Gb ram and the worse machine is: Intel Pentium 4 3.40GHz, 2GB, Time taken to boot a windows server 2008 is 4 minutes. NOTE that in our organization there is an impression that we have the best machines :doh:

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                          Vark111
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #33

                          Psh. None of y'all know what a pathetic dev box is. My current machine is a P4. No core anything duo. 2Gb of Ram. Had to scrape through the reject pile to get that. It has 2 hard drives. Each is 30Gb. I didn't miss a zero in that. A total of 60 Gb HD space. And the only reason I have the second drive is because I found it while I was scrounging for the extra RAM. Is it any wonder I prefer to work from home? (Core i7, 12 Gb RAM, SSD system drive + 500 Gb secondary drive)

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                          • G Gary Wheeler

                            My current work machine: Intel Core 2 Duo, 2.66 GHz, 4G RAM. Pathetic, no?

                            Software Zen: delete this;

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                            D Offline
                            Dan Neely
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #34

                            Gary Wheeler wrote:

                            My current work machine: Intel Core 2 Duo, 2.66 GHz, 4G RAM. Pathetic, no?

                            Only 2.53 ghz here; and about 2 or 2.5 years left before lifecycle replacement; OTOH my last 2 replacements were about a year prior to when they were due to be lifecycled. The 1st because when my XP install got overly crufty it was old enough there wasn't a company image for it and they discovered that the dell image was responsible for weird performance glitches. The second because when the win7 push came mine was 3 years old and they needed to get the interns newer laptops than they were using at the time; so they picked people with less than a year left who were power users and upgraded us early. OTOH I've been promised an upgrade to 8GB once the next batch of 4gb sodimms are ordered...

                            3x12=36 2x12=24 1x12=12 0x12=18

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                            • V Vark111

                              Psh. None of y'all know what a pathetic dev box is. My current machine is a P4. No core anything duo. 2Gb of Ram. Had to scrape through the reject pile to get that. It has 2 hard drives. Each is 30Gb. I didn't miss a zero in that. A total of 60 Gb HD space. And the only reason I have the second drive is because I found it while I was scrounging for the extra RAM. Is it any wonder I prefer to work from home? (Core i7, 12 Gb RAM, SSD system drive + 500 Gb secondary drive)

                              G Offline
                              G Offline
                              Gary Wheeler
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #35

                              I'm afraid you, er, win.

                              Software Zen: delete this;

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • A Albert Bezzina

                                Hi all, Just out of curiosity which is your worst developer machine? In our room, 3 developers, 10 machines [2 Core2Duo, 2 Pentium D & 6 Pentium 4], the best developers machine is Core2Duo E7300 4Gb ram and the worse machine is: Intel Pentium 4 3.40GHz, 2GB, Time taken to boot a windows server 2008 is 4 minutes. NOTE that in our organization there is an impression that we have the best machines :doh:

                                J Offline
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                                Jason Christian
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #36

                                That's ridiculous when for $300 you can get a Core2 Duo with 4GB RAM. The productivity increase would pay for itself with a couple months at most.

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                                • V Vark111

                                  Psh. None of y'all know what a pathetic dev box is. My current machine is a P4. No core anything duo. 2Gb of Ram. Had to scrape through the reject pile to get that. It has 2 hard drives. Each is 30Gb. I didn't miss a zero in that. A total of 60 Gb HD space. And the only reason I have the second drive is because I found it while I was scrounging for the extra RAM. Is it any wonder I prefer to work from home? (Core i7, 12 Gb RAM, SSD system drive + 500 Gb secondary drive)

                                  A Offline
                                  A Offline
                                  asoo
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #37

                                  Yeah, Similar specs here, except 2.8GHz Celeron :wtf: CPU. And i've been on a waiting list for a replacement for god knows how long (faulty motherboard, but hey, IT WORRKSSS).

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                                  • J Jorgen Andersson

                                    If developers have bad machines they have a better incentive to make efficient code.

                                    List of common misconceptions

                                    J Offline
                                    J Offline
                                    Johann Gerell
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #38

                                    Jörgen Andersson wrote:

                                    If developers have bad machines they have a better incentive to make efficient code.

                                    Maybe add that to the List of common misconceptions[^] ... ;P

                                    Time you enjoy wasting is not wasted time - Bertrand Russel

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                                    • A Albert Bezzina

                                      Hi all, Just out of curiosity which is your worst developer machine? In our room, 3 developers, 10 machines [2 Core2Duo, 2 Pentium D & 6 Pentium 4], the best developers machine is Core2Duo E7300 4Gb ram and the worse machine is: Intel Pentium 4 3.40GHz, 2GB, Time taken to boot a windows server 2008 is 4 minutes. NOTE that in our organization there is an impression that we have the best machines :doh:

                                      R Offline
                                      R Offline
                                      R Erasmus
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #39

                                      O, that would most certainly be the one I'm currently working on... Intel Core2 CPU, 1.86HGHz with 2GB, Takes bout 10 minutes to completely boot, about a further 5 minutes to warm up. Once its heated up it speeds up to normal, manageable speeds. I like it though... It gives me an excuse to go light up a cigarette and drink some coffee in the morning while it boots up. :-D

                                      "Program testing can be used to show the presence of bugs, but never to show their absence." << please vote!! >>

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                                      • M Mark_Wallace

                                        I think that developers should be issued nothing better than a Pentium 2. That way, when their product goes to market, instead of customers not being able to run it, because it requires the biggest, fastest computers, if it's to to crawl out of its box, it'll go like sh1t off a shovel. Result: Happier customers, and better-paid devs. Suck it in and use the worst one.

                                        I wanna be a eunuchs developer! Pass me a bread knife!

                                        A Offline
                                        A Offline
                                        asoo
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #40

                                        I did read that first as: Result: Happier customers, and better-paid devs slaves.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • A Albert Bezzina

                                          Hi all, Just out of curiosity which is your worst developer machine? In our room, 3 developers, 10 machines [2 Core2Duo, 2 Pentium D & 6 Pentium 4], the best developers machine is Core2Duo E7300 4Gb ram and the worse machine is: Intel Pentium 4 3.40GHz, 2GB, Time taken to boot a windows server 2008 is 4 minutes. NOTE that in our organization there is an impression that we have the best machines :doh:

                                          A Offline
                                          A Offline
                                          Anna Jayne Metcalfe
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #41

                                          Our "worst" dev machine is a Samung netbook - it takes over an hour to do a full rebuild of our main solution (330kLOC in 29 projects) on it, and (of course) has an absolutely tiny screen. On the plus side the battery life is immense so you can do smaller development tasks on it while travelling without fuss (I was doing exactly that while travelling yesterday, in fact). By comparison my main dev box (a dual core Win2k8 Opteron with 5GB RAM) builds the same code in about 20 minutes and the i7 based laptop (which I've just had to return with a graphics adaptor fault - damn!) in a quite astonishing 9.5 minutes. The Opteron is a good compromise between speed and realism though; it's a nice and easy to expand machine (HP Proliant Server) and I can't see myself replacing it for a while yet.

                                          Anna :rose: Tech Blog | Visual Lint "Why would anyone prefer to wield a weapon that takes both hands at once, when they could use a lighter (and obviously superior) weapon that allows you to wield multiple ones at a time, and thus supports multi-paradigm carnage?"

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