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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Music. Melodic alternative metal/rock stuff. 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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If I'm listening to anything it's usually ambient music from iTunes radio. The only other way I can listen to music is to play the same song over and over again until the lyrics don't capture my attention anymore. You don't want to be my office mate when that happens :) |
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I like listening to Streaming Soundtracks. It plays user-requested movie soundtracks, TV themes, and computer game music. Quite geeky. Oh, and according to the Peopleware book, listening to music whilst programming will reduce your creativity, because it occupies the creative side of your brain... so you are less likely to have aha-genius moments of breakthrough. |
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I'd prefer absolute silence. Music is better than conversation though, but I find lyrics distracting. If I'm working on a difficult problem I reach for Bach, Beethoven, or Mozart. If I'm doing general work, I go for either russian trance techno or ambient. |
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No music during concentration on things to be done. But I found out that headphones even without a music really can help - everybody around think that your are listening to something and so you can't hear them... and actually you are distracted twice rarer. It helps to get things done even if you are lack of private/quiet office space. BTW, simplynoise or birdsong is a kind of ambient noise people can find quite comfortable with.. |
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I'm listening to loud hard rock music. Makes me concentrate in my office while 9 people are talking around me ... |
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Peopleware mentions a study regarding listening to music while coding. According to its conclusions, it doesn't make you less productive in general - it does make you less creative. Of course, by being less creative, you will lose one element in productivity, so you'll be less productive overall, especially if you're working on a new design. Of course, if you always listen to music there'll be no other scenario to compare you against, and noone will be able to claim that you are "less" productive :) |
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White noise is meant to help concentration. I use a set of noise cancelling headphones, these play white noise so even when not playing music the noise from the rest of the office is blocked out. |
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Jesse Cook - Vertigo (Album) |
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The album "Live After Death" by Iron Maiden. |
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SPOTIFY is a free application that allows you to stream whatever tunes rock your world |
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Personally: Spoon, Beta Band, Bonobo, Voodoo Trombone Quartet and Dave Matthews Band. Sometimes I throw some Kaki King on too. If it's new music, my brain seems to switch into audio-comprehension mode which means that it'll be spending some of its juice memorizing the melody for next time. Once I've internalized the music, that doesn't happen. The flipside is that I seem to be more creative when my brain is making new connections. So when I'm looking to max productivity, I play stuff from the above list. If I'm trying to max creativity, I play something new that seems like I might enjoy it. |
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If I'm doing something boring I usually listen to DotNetRocks or Hanselminutes. Otherwise I find Trance, Techo & House is good to program too. I like rock/metal but find them distracting while coding. |
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When doing design work or documentation or research or stuff like that, I can't listen to music, but I love music when coding -- anything from Sarah McLachlan to the Beatles to Dream Theater. I cannot listen to podcasts while coding though. I tried and found that I either (a) missed the entire podcast or (b) sat motionless listening to the podcast and got nothing else done. Luckily I have a long commute so I listen to podcasts then. |
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I have over 5k songs I listen to at work, ranging from Donna the Buffalo to Kraftwerk, Neil Young to Switchblade symphony, Orbital to Eminem, or Digital Underground to Avec laudanum. |
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If I'm having to do a lot of reading (research/help files/etc.) I don't like to listen to anything except instrumental music. If I'm in the mode of just translating my PDL to the language I'm using then I can listen to just about anything and I typically will listen to podcasts. If I'm debugging I don't listen to anything. |
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Squarepusher. |
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I couldn't survive without my iPod. Typically I listen to podcasts, but I also find my favourite tunes to be a great way to stimulate creativity. When I'm up against a particularly hard problem though, nothing beats something with a fast beat and no lyrics - Infected Mushroom has been a favourite this week. |
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In those particular cases when I really need to concentrate I can generate pink noise under ALSA with this command:
I just let it run in the background for the time needed, which can be hours. |
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The weekly Off the Hook. Indie rock, J-Pop, the occasional youtube lecture. |
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I usually listen to music. I've tried listening to podcasts but I'm unable to follow both the podcast subject as well as my task at hand. |
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Streaming's not allowed at work so I use my xm radio and iPhone as sources. On xm I'm tuned in to POTUS08 as the day starts and the I switch to ethel (alternative rock) when it's time to get productive. I typically switch to Pandora in the afternoon where I have a fairly eclectic mix of Metallica, NIN, Cake, MIA, Ting Tings, Muse, Me First and the Gimme Gimmes and some classic rock for good measure. When I need to really concentrate I adjust the volume. |
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Yes, yes. DJ Krush and Autchre. |
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I love listening to music, generally up-beat 80's music but anything is good including rave! It really helps me concentrate as I have a real problem concentrating when I can hear people talking about stuff in the background. For the last 6 years or so I have worked at my current employer we (the developers) have always listened to music but with the introduction of a new development manager the music has been banned, the reason being; the manager works in the same room as us and finds it difficult to concentrate.. Needless to say the decision was accepted with open arms. . |
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I'll often listen to Pandora through the AIR Application. Work is pretty locked down, but this one luxury is just enough to make me <3 it. If I get sick of the streams, I'll fire up my iPhone and hit my Recently Added playlist. Kinds of music I'll listen to:
The one thing I can't/won't listen to while working is the spoken word. I can't juggle a podcast or tutorial video while working. Sure, I'll try it sometimes but only when I'm not actually working. I call those mini-breaks. :) |
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Definitely music. Anything with talking like a podcast splits my concentration and I lose efficiency in my coding and I don't really focus on the podcast enough either. As for the kind of music, it needs to be high energy. Something that elevates the heartrate/adrenalin levels helps my focus tremendously. Disturbed, The Offspring, Metallica, or even oldschool like AC/DC. Oddly enough, if it's something repetitive like trance/techno, it has the opposite effect on my focus. It's like my brain gets stuck in teh same loop the music is in. |
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The gentle humming of my own awesomeness. Also sometimes BBC Radio 4, quiet enough to be background noise, loud enough to let me occasionally recognise interesting bits to give myself a break. Also sometimes instrumental electronica and jazz. |
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I'm quite an unorthodox person in this department. I watch movies/sitcoms on one screen and studio/eclipse/netbeans on the other. Comedies relax me as hell and relaxation is what I need to write code. I usually watch comedies such as: Knocked Up, Mouse Hunt, Zack and Miri make a porno, Tommy boy, Snatch, etc. |
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