vote up 1 vote down star

I know there's a lot to be said for developers having offices with doors.

Supposing that’s not an option, what’s your opinion of playing music in an open plan office on Friday evenings?

I’ve worked in a place that did just that, and personally I didn’t mind it.

I’m working in a place that doesn’t play music, my developers suggested it, but the idea was totally shot down by one of the directors.

Opinions? Do you love it? Hate it?

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<Insert Milton/Office space joke here> – Vagnerr Jul 7 at 11:08
What about if the boss plays annoying music .... on repeat? Will the developers like it! – Rick J Jul 7 at 11:08
@Vagnerr we are gonna need you to go ahead and move to storage B – Rick J Jul 7 at 11:09

closed as not programming related by Canavar, Neil Butterworth, unwind, Thomas Owens, Shoban Jul 7 at 11:45

9 Answers

vote up 13 vote down

One word.

HEADPHONES!

Unless you work in a nutty, funny farm so then by all means play music like the mental chewing gum played in the asylum in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest! (-:

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Yes, and if you play music, maybe somebody else decides they can play music too. And all hell is unleashed. – Skurmedel Jul 7 at 11:23
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I love my 'Sennheisers', you really don't want to inflict your musical tastes on others. It's just rude. – Chris Huang-Leaver Jul 7 at 12:28
vote up 4 vote down

Music would completely prevent me from doing any non-trivial work. Please don't.

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vote up 3 vote down

I think the chances of an entire office of people comming to a censensus about whether music should be played, and then which music is unlikely at best, given the absense of such an agreement then it is a matter of good conduct not to annoy your fellow developer

Your options in this regard appear to be limited to:

  1. Don't listen to music
  2. Listen using headphones

Sometimes even headphones can be annoying, like when the music in the headphones is so loud that the it can be heared by people around them

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vote up 2 vote down

I would mind. It would interfere with music from my headphones.

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vote up 2 vote down

We used to have the radio on (with a fairly middle-of-the-road station playing) in an office where I once worked.

The reason we stopped though is because if someone phones up (esp. a customer), it sounds like you're working in a garage. It's not very professional. Didn't stop us getting work done though, but I guess that's because everyone agreed on the choice of music. I doubt that'll be the case in most workplaces.

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Did my current boss work there? He has freaky ideas, almost Victorian in fact, about what's professional! – Rob Wells Jul 7 at 12:44
vote up 1 vote down

The choice of music is subjective. Playing death metal may not go down well with your co-worker (e.g COBOL programmer).... So the best option is headphones as Rob Wells mentioned.

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vote up 1 vote down

It's ok in theory but if you gert caught in the wrong mood it can be annoying. Especially when the "DJ" decides to have some "fun" and play absolute crap really really loud.

I've been toying with this idea for a while now but I'm not sure how much of a tool I want to look while trying to be taken seriously.

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vote up 0 vote down

There's no simple yes no answer to this, it depends on the group of people you have. Assuming they'll all honestly speak up about what they are/aren't prepared to listen to and you can find common ground which people are happy with, then go for it.

Bottom line is though that this is a place of work and peoples right to work in a distraction free environment has to come ahead of others desire to listen to their favourite music without headphones.

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vote up 0 vote down

We used to have a shared playlist in one office where I worked. Anyone could queue up music they liked or skip a track they hated. A good friend and colleague gave me a mix CD when I left the company - it contained every track he had queued that I had skipped.

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