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Ask HN: What temperature do you keep your home office for maximum productivity?

3 points by nowooski 2 years ago · 9 comments


matt_s 2 years ago

47 degrees and my shivering causes random keystrokes that emit perfect code, slack messages and reviews. Seriously though if I notice that I’m feeling extra warm or cold then that is distracting so I change the thermostat.

farseer 2 years ago

75-77F (24-25C Approximately). We have multiple standing A/C units. There have been several thermostat wars where partisans run units in the opposite thermal direction to balance out any actual or perceived imbalances.

meristohm 2 years ago

"Maximum productivity temperature" is whatever doesn't have me shivering or sweating. In the winter (PNW, west of Mt. Tahoma) we keep our house at 59-61F, and in the summer we let it get up to 76-78F before cooling it down (will use fans to cool us down, though, if it's not too humid).

If it's just me in an outbuilding I'll put on a hat and coat and be okay in 41F (the lowest I've noted while also being comfortable enough typing). "Optimal" in that case includes the cost to heat the space, which I'd rather not do if I don't have to.

legitster 2 years ago

It used to be that anything about 71F was unbearable to work in.

I have since moved to a drier climate and have found the thermometer can creep up to 77F without noticing.

Even subtle changes in humidity can have huge impacts.

BillyTheMage 2 years ago

Productivity is a spook, but I like it around 75°F

JohnFen 2 years ago

70. Not for productivity, just for comfort.

simonblack 2 years ago

Under 28C

vinyl7 2 years ago

80F

kidgorgeous 2 years ago

75 degrees

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