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The coders cave

Our house lately has been a mine of change, 2 new windows, 1 new boiler, and stripped/paint/wallpaper 2 rooms (including the nursery) and retiled the bathroom. I did this all with the help of my family, I do enjoy DIY but depend on the guidance of my dad for the tricky jobs (like fitting a window frame). This explains some of my absence lately, working to a deadline before February and baby comes, ready or not. This has meant nearly all our rooms have been revamped apart from one, my cave.

It was bound to happen, all the rooms were sparkling in the new year but the cave remained. Emma was soon asking me to sort it out and faced with what was really a mess I made a start. Now caves are pretty much something every geek should have, it is your sanctuary, your refuge. It is a place where you can lock in your zone and code without interruption or hassle. To truly do your thing this is where you come. In my cave, by day when no one is in I have the music up on loud and by night I use headphones. Music takes out background noise, I have been coding to it for years as it blocks out talking, phones and other crap. I tend to eat, drink and even on occasion sleep in my cave. A typical cave day starts in the morning with coffee, with trips to the kitchen for more coffee. I tend to eat elsewhere so I don't end up with half of it in my keyboard but coffee is the stable drink in my cave. My cave has a window, a view is all important. It allows you to pause and think but I am also terribly nosey and like to see what is going on as the world passes by :) Having a baby is going to change all of that but for now this is how I live in my cave.

The biggest problem is my cave has horded a lot of stuff. Caves are supposed to, but after a while it gets messy and you run out of space. My cave has so many spare pc parts it is like I killed and ate a giant pc. My biggest problem is books, I am a book junkie, a complete and utter lost case and collect books on just about every subject from GA's to cooking and by authors from King to Sells. I am a complete King junkie and having consumed everything he has written (short stories, Bachman and all) have started to read that other horror suspense master, Dean Koontz and have been chewing my way through his books at a rate of knots. Alas nerd books suffer with the content getting dated and my .net 1.0 books are mostly so dated they are of little value. So I started the task of reducing books, packing them into boxes (just can't bring myself to sell them) for storage. Gaps have opened up and I found myself first in my local borders (coffee in hand) checking out books and then checking prices on Amazon. Buying nerd books is something I struggle to do now. While I consume any knowledge I can the cost of books and the rate the information they contain goes out of date means I have a hard time justifying it. I tend now to treat buying books as a very rare thing and pick books that will stay topical for a long time and are so packed full that I can take my time with my consumption. Repopulating my cave is something I won't do in full but with my new found space I will enjoy picking some really great books.

Comments

rrobbins said:

Yes, it is difficult to get rid of obsolete technology books. I've been trying to sell my Visual J++ books for a long time. Nobody wants my Windows NT certification exam books. Recently I tried to sell a lot of Visual Basic books and even they did find any buyers.

# January 12, 2008 5:32 PM

Noticias externas said:

Our house lately has been a mine of change, 2 new windows, 1 new boiler, and stripped/paint/wallpaper

# January 12, 2008 6:03 PM

The Other Steve said:

<blockquote>So I started the task of reducing books, packing them into boxes (just can't bring myself to sell them) for storage.</blockquote>

I put things in boxes.  If I haven't opened the box in three years... I toss the whole thing out.  I don't have the room to keep a bunch of stuff I might use someday, when I know I'll never touch it.

Old technical books only have value as recycled cardboard.

I also tossed out all my old MSDN CDs, and software which dates back to pre-WinXP.  I have no more floppies in my house, or cassete tapes, etc.

# January 13, 2008 2:46 PM

Jamie Cansdale said:

I found myself in a similar situation when I moved. The best thing to do with old books is take them to a charity shop. They'll sort, sell and recycle them for you. :)

Oh and be ruthless! If you box them up you'll almost certainly never look at them again. Recycle them now while they might still have some value to someone.

# January 14, 2008 10:23 PM

kirsty said:

you're just too geek for me! i dont have a cave , i have my own sofa, god help anyone who comes near it, on it I have three remotes, two laptops, my none work mobile and an empty packet of ginger nuts. Having a sofa to myself means i get to unleash my geek online whilst also watching reruns of family guy on the tv.

anyway, enough of this, i see enough of you throughout the day and theres a glass of vodkacoke with my name on it.

# February 20, 2008 4:42 PM