Hacker News new | ask | show | jobs
by abecedarius 4175 days ago
It bums me out some to see the standard-bearer for private offices in our profession showing us floor-to-ceiling glass walls in a panopticon arc, "not as creepy as you think"[1]. The Overton window's shifted so far to the cage-free side that privacy isn't even in our frame? OK, a few companies still believe in offices with walls.

I don't doubt that it's a fine place to work, likely nicer than the cubicles I've worked in, though maybe not better than my home office. But they're clearly not private.

[1] From a caption on the original version of the page.

8 comments

The glass walls would be more tolerable if the mid-section was opaque/frosted glass, so you still get the light but you also get a degree of privacy.
Putting up transparent bubble wrap does a great job of blurring what's behind, while letting people see if you're in your office. Raid the shipping department.
Adjustable blinds would address my beef, too.
I work in an open space (when I'm in the office), and the uncomfortable feeling of people walking by and glancing at my screen is the main reason I dislike working in the open.

The panopticon metaphor is apt - I feel uncomfortable taking well-deserved minute-long breaks when I have no privacy.

Seriously, that looks like a developer zoo, and would make me twitchy and paranoid all the time.
Came to say the same thing. That is creepy, period.

People might be able to adopt, but that's actually the worst part of the open floor plan for me: The constant feeling of people in your back.

I don't need a door. I need a wall. Right behind me.

I wonder if you can turn around and face the glass walls when sitting, or if you have to have them to your back. If it's the latter, there's zero privacy advantage in this case to having a private office.
That is exactly how I have my desk setup. Monitors Facing the wall. Me facing the door. The office feels a bit smaller, but I'd rather not have my back/side to the door.
Panopticon[1] was the word I was thinking of, too.

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panopticon

I actually really like the glass windows, though blinds or a bit of frosting would be nice, but they make excellent places to scribble thoughts.
So just lean a bunch of folded cardboard boxes against the glass.