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Do you listen to anything while programming? Podcast, internet radio, etc... I've always wonder if listening to music of what not makes one more or less productive. Thoughts...

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When there are people speaking nearby and I'm having trouble concentrating, I find that some pink/brown noise is very easy to ignore. There is a nice Flash noise generator here:

http://simplynoise.com/

It sounds sort of like running water.

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How can you be more productive if you're running to the bathroom more? :-) – Steve Perks Oct 28 '08 at 14:53
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-1 : I've got headache after 5 minutes :( – Oscar Reyes Feb 25 '09 at 21:06
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woow this is amazing. the brown noise helps me even more than silence does, for some reason. – Jimmy Apr 7 '09 at 23:01
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I think I started to like simultaneously listening to noise + music. Noise fills up the silent parts in the music and it feels like listening to the music while watching a heavy downpour of rain. Very comforting! :) – Ates Goral Oct 1 at 18:30
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Does it sound like flushing toilets though? – Skilldrick Oct 2 at 15:07
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I listen to music while just doing general programming but when I need to solve a problem or step through a proceess I find music to be a huge distraction.

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Specially when it's music with lyrics – sshow Aug 31 at 17:17
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I find anything that isn't music to be distracting. I definitely find that listening to music increases my productivity.

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Depends, I prefer to code in silence but I'd rather code listening to music than to other people's conversations in our open-plan office.

If I am listening to music, I'm not really bothered what; as long as I don't have to think about it, so anything without talking / speaking. I don't mind singing, as long as it's not at the front of the mix, burrowing into my sub-conscious.

Andrew

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Depends on the type of work. If I'm shuffling HTML, I absolutely listen to music. If I'm trying to think through a design structure or an algorithm, then I prefer silence.

I cannot work on anything while there are voices talking, but singing is ok.

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I'd prefer silence, but Bose noise-canceling headphones and jazz at low volume are the best I can manage.

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Unlike everybody else, I actually like podcasts with talking while coding. It can be IT related, but not exactly on the problem I'm working on now. It helps me from going to the browser while things are compiling and testing. Sometimes for particularly heavy problems, I prefer silence, but most of the time I'm just crunching away on coding/testing/debugging/documenting something I already figured out. I notice that I don't actually hear very much of the podcasts, so I can listen to them multiple times.

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my answer..

all kinds of metal - fasterloudermeaner the better

double kick on thrash and death metal forces my focus and puts my blinders on. it also tends to make me clench my jaw notgood

got a pc at work about 120 gb of music. as we had a company crack down on mp3s and movies/tv being on the network, i took my own pc in and scavenged up a 9" monochrome CRT which runs Winamp in double size perfectly with some cheap logitech speakers. my co-erkers don't tend to complain about the noise, i have headphones but can't be completely blocked off from whats going on in the office. they either aren't bothered or are too scared :)

just been playing with 8tracks.com and put up a mix of some random stuff i listen to. 8tracks.Com\MattRitchie. it plays the songs in your mix randomly, lots of other non-metal stuff up there too, lots of cool jazz mixes.

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"they either aren't bothered or are too scared", Hmmm, I once worked with an obnoxious nut-case (age 30 going on 14) who used to listen to Ramstein etc out loud in the office without a word of asking. The deluded $#$@-hole then actually told us it was our problem if we couldn't concentrate because of others music. I sincerely hope it's not you because the world is better without $#@!-heads like him. – Ash Dec 10 at 10:42
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When I was a freelance contractor I listened to the sound of money being deposited into my bank.

Now that I'm a permanent employee I listen to the sound of my shares plummeting downwards.

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I know that it doesn't work well for everyone but I tend to focus better and actually type faster when I am listing to trance and techno. Currently I tend to like DJ Tiësto the best but I usually change genre if I get stuck...

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Good Instrumentals with No Vocals

Current favorites:

BSG Soundtrack

Firefly Soundtrack

Enighma

A variety of stuff found under a search for "Guitar" on magnatune.com Especially Reza Manzoori and Heavy Mellow.

http://magnatune.com/artists/reza

http://magnatune.com/artists/heavy%5Fmellow

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If I need to drown something out, I find Electronic or Industrial music works, particularly if it's in a foreign language (It's less distracting that way). Rammstein works well for this purpose, since I don't speak German.

If there's nothing in particular to drown out, then ambient is the way to go.

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If the coding problem I'm working on is particularly gnarly then I code in silence with the window open and listen to the birds and ambient background noise (I live/work pretty much outa town and there is a nice rural feel).

If it's day-to-day coding stuff then I'll listen to music (http://last.fm/user/cosmicklev). I'm also quite lucky that I work from home and so don't have to listen to music with headphones on which I find quite annoying after a while.

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I find it impossible to listen to music whilst coding. If I'm listening to music, then I'm listening to music. If I'm coding, then I'm concentrating on that. Wasn't there a study in Peopleware that showed that developers who listen to music whilst programming are as productive as those who program in silence, but produced code that contained more mistakes?

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Goldberg Variations played by Glenn Gould, 1982 edition.

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I've got the variety going through my iPod touch since they've blocked all the streaming audio at work 8^D

I have some tech podcasts that I listen to in the mornings during the morning log/e-mail/news check. I keep a variety of rock for the general stuff and an assortment of trance and ambient music for the heavy programming times. Oddly enough the repetitive beats or "zone out" music keeps me focused and clear headed.

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I grew up in a large family, so I'm used to a certain amount of chatter, except when that chatter touches on things I'm involved with - then it gets distracting because my brain keeps picking out keywords

So, I listen to podcasts or pandora - and I can listen to podcasts 3 or 4 times before they get old because I'm not paying attention to them.

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I mostly like listening to music (primarily classical, Aphex Twin, NIN, and mash-ups), but occasionally I listen to a podcast or TED talk.

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I listen to some real heavy stuff :D Im a metal head, and also work in a relatively large office with teams that make shedloads of noise (I have no idea what management were thinking when they decided on this!) So I drown out the noise with headphones on..

On the rare occasion that is quieter, I like to listen to podcasts while coding the more mundane bits..

If its tough code, then I tend to put some easier listening stuff on loud (to drown out the noise) this helps me focus more on the code..

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I like to listen to trance or electro house while coding, something with no or minimal lyrics. Industrial music works too. Hip Hop or others are distracting. However, i find about 5 minutes after i put my headphones on, it's time for a meeting or someone has a question for me. Also, i like the whitenoise generator listed above. Thanks to the crappy drivers on my laptop, that staticy noice is always on and it's a feature i can't turn off.

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I listen to the neighbors fight until my kids get home from school. Then I listen to my kids fight.

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No music at all. Just a quiet workplace without much distraction or phone calls.

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For me works best bands like "Explosions in the Sky" or electronic. Most importantly there should be no vocals.

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The one thing I don't listen to, is anything containing words. Except for certain low-key songs. So no Stackoverflow podcasts for me during work hours because I invariably get latched on to whatever ridiculous thing Joel or Jeff has just trotted out ;) and end up losing focus on the code.

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I do listen music and podcast, but after a few minutes I just ignore the music, I do not pay attention to it, but I need to hear the noise, if I do not do that I get distracted very easy.

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I have my iPod shuffling through all my songs when I code. Sometimes it's distracting, but usually a better song is one button-press away.

Music has certainly become more of a necessity now that I'm in an open office with about 5 other people, and another 3 or 4 walking through on a regular basis. Even so, when I was in an office by myself, I still had the music going; I just had it playing through speakers instead of my headphones.

(Incidentally, now that I'm using headphones more often, I definitely second Jeff's post about the necessity of good headphones. The ones I'm using now are a huge step up from the iPod's earbuds.)

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Music. Something heavy, usually. Power metal, like DragonForce and HammerFall, most of the time.

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Music. Melodic alternative metal/rock stuff.

example 1

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But, if I really have to concentrate, I prefer silence.

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I find the music I tend to prefer (rock, etc) too distracting for coding, so I'll tend to listen to Drum 'n Bass / Ambient techno. My favorite station is probably Bassdrive. Extremely repetitive music, almost to the point of annoyance, but it seems to have a motivational quality that keeps you moving and productive. Maybe not best for situations in which you wish to code slowly and carefully.

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I usually only listen to music while coding if I can do so for some time (a few hours) uninterrupted. I recently started listening to music album-at-a-time, which I now prefer to listening and managing a playlist composed of individual songs.

I listen to a broad spectrum of genre, though I must confess that about half of my music archive seems to be composed of Metal and its derivatives. Metal music helps me concentrate unless I'm doing some heavy thinking. (In which case I prefer to get up and pace around)

That said, I've had some pretty long and constructive coding runs listening to the Warcraft II soundtrack.

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