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Code at 30,000 feet (inconshreveable.com)
9 points by inconshreveable on Oct 17, 2013 | hide | past | favorite | 5 comments



I love coding on airplanes. Last time I was on a plane, I was writing some web-something that I can't fully remember anymore, but what I do remember is that I needed MarkDown, but didn't have lib or the api docs. Since Google and Github weren't available, I fired up spotlight, found a random js file in some old folder, and had to use Chrome inspector to navigate the api, and man was it rewarding!

I love it for the challenge. Coding without the internet is not something I do often, but for some reason, at 30,000 feet it's simply therapeutic.


The lack of distractions is appealing, but I'm only 5'6" and I find airplanes to be extremely uncomfortable. I can only imagine how bad it is for someone that's average height or taller. I've done work on a plane, but it isn't really an experience that I long to duplicate.


Yep, I find coding on planes to be pretty productive too, if only for the fact that it's not like you have anything better to do. The only hard part is looking stuff up, like APIs. I find airplanes really useful for code reviews though. I often end up with less code after a flight than before.


+1 for coding on a plane. Definitely have had some of my most productive sessions up there.


As long as the person in front of you doesn't decide to lean back their chair. I've spent coding sessions on a plane with my screen tipped so far forward I had to lean down to see it. If you fly, please don't lean back your chair without checking if the guy behind you has a laptop out.




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