Ask Slashdot: What Music do you Code By? 713
Silas writes "I value music as an important part of the coding/debugging/designing process, and choosing what music to listen to while working on a given piece of code can be as subtle and interesting a process as choosing what data structure or regular expression to use. My personal selection varies from Mozart to Happy Rave, Dave Matthews Band to Enigma, but I'm interested to know what members of the larger coding community listen to when they're doing their thing, getting in the zone. What music do you code by?" Ah. I like nothing less than coding to a good progressive Drum 'N Bass song. What about you all?
Morrissey... (Score:1)
Metallica (Score:1)
Metal/Industrial/Synthpop/Gothic and a bit classic (Score:1)
Iron Maiden, Pantera, Type O Negative, Dark Tranquillity, Nine Inch Nails, Sisters of Mercy, Project Pitchfork, Nitzer Ebb, Bauhaus, Fear Factory, KMFDM and the Matrix Soundtrack
Very occasionally, I will listen to some Wagner, Grieg or Mussorgsky
--
Re:Morrissey... (Score:1)
nothing better than some mind pounding bass to get my creative juices flowing..
delta 9, doa and lenny dee just to name a few
Ministry! (Score:1)
Or sometime, for variation, some Xorcist or Sisters of Mercy...
Pink Floyd (Score:1)
depends on what I'm writing (Score:1)
c : misfits/black flag/ fear
forth: mozart
thats about that
Re:Morrissey... (Score:1)
Re:depends on what I'm writing (Score:1)
grr..
Noisemusic.org (Score:2)
Re:Morrissey... (Score:1)
Tchaikovsky or Chopin (Score:1)
Ministry of Sound (Score:1)
Ben Tindale
Britney! (Score:3)
Its hard to have an insightful comment about this topic, as music taste usually comes down to, well taste, and everybody has one. I also think its a bit of situation and mood thing.
Call me a moron, but for those 5 in the morning sessions, when one has had so much sugar, caffiene, etc that the body is about the crystalize and the brain is working on sheer impulse rather than thought: nothing beats some really shallow happy girl pop like Britney Spears or Spice Girls.
I wouldn't be caught dead listening to that in the day (unless its on MTV of course), but when my brain is soft and mushy, pop seems closer to its resonant frequency. No one gives motivation as the sun climbs over the horizon after a sleepless night like my lovely Britney..
Otherwise I like music with a more character and maturity, even when I'm concentrating. Preferably some of the 70s Pink Floyd or David Bowie albums, whose effect is the opposite: allowing me to calm down and concentrate on solving a problem.
-
The Pixies (Score:1)
Also like some Autechre or Aphex Twin if I'm feeling really adventurous.
Ben
Music to Code by (Score:1)
For short, intense sessions, I tend to prefer Jazz. Wynton Marsalis, Vince Guaraldi, Thelonious Monk and Alien Fashion Show work pretty well.
Mixed in between, I'll listen to Blondie, Talking Heads, Peter Gabriel and such for a little contrast. Something to shake me up and keep from "zoning out".
Overall, anything except country will do the job, though I will listen to Junior Brown on occasion. (Surf music from a country artist, go figure)
If I had a
Polka! (Score:1)
Wine" (not really a polka exactly), Weird Al's
polka medleys, and a few others.
Smashing Pumpkins, Pearl Jam, Led Zep, Soundgarden (Score:1)
For me coding music *has* to be loud and slightly heavy. It's like I need to plug the audio channel so I won't be distracted by the real world.
None (Score:1)
Silence, thanks.
music without words (Score:1)
Music (Score:1)
All major sessions have been accompanied by Enigma, KLF and things in that sort of ambian/ light dance theme.
hink long CD's help as well (or ones that work on cont random play).
Jink (off to buy some more CD's
Whatever (Score:1)
It depends... (Score:1)
However, I have found that upbeat music does work really well when you are trying to code something up quickly. Softer music (i.e. '50s style Jazz) can put me in a bit of a trance, so that I find myself approaching the problem from a different perspective. It is really a balancing act that you must follow. However, there is also a time when you do need to have peace and quiet to approach a problem. But, not all of the time though!
Anyway, my web site (see above) has specific comments on artists that I usually find myself listening to. But, that does not exclude any other group...
Justin
All sorts of stuff . . . (Score:1)
It all depends on what kind of mood I'm in.
Re:Morrissey... (Score:1)
Eclectic. (Score:2)
This, of course, differs from my "normal" music -- right now, the MP3 playlist has some Frank Zappa, some Korn, 2Pac, a little bit of everything.
Interesting side-discussion (maybe): I mean, a little bit of everything. My CD collection ranges from all of the above, through Johnny Cash, and back around to The Cure. How many c0derZ have similarly wide-ranging tastes (i.e. not just listening to one style of music)?
Fairly Random (Score:2)
The collection includes: Alice In Chains, Ani DiFranco (including more than one album involving Utah Phillips), Annie Lennox, Metallica (and Apocalyptica doing Metallica), a little Beethoven, some Cherry Poppin' Daddies, "Cry Cry Cry", Dar Williams, Dead Can Dance, Deep Forest, Depeche Mode, Eric Clapton, some Eurythmics, Fields Of The Nephilim, Fiona Apple, Front Line Assembly, Garbage, Heather Nova, Hole, Information Society, Joan Osborne, KMFDM, Live, Madonna's latest album, Massive Attack, Ministry, a little Mozart, NIN, PJ Harvey (she's great!), a little Primus, a little REM, Rage Against The Machine, Richard Shindell, Rob Zombie, a little Sade, Sarah McLachlan, Skinny Puppy, Squirrel Nut Zippers, Sting, a small amount of The Cardigans, a couple Toni Braxton songs, Tricky, Tool, and a rather thorough collection of Tori Amos.
In other words, I listen to Industrial, "Rock", Folk, Metal, "Pop", Techno, Swing, some R&B, a little classical (there's also some Wagner that I haven't been listening to much recently, so hasn't made it into the archive yet) with a strong dose of female vocals in there... When I'm busy coding, I'm more likely to stick with the "heavier" or more "active" stuff (Ani DiFranco, Garbage, Hole, Information Society, KMFDM, Massive Attack, Tricky, Metallica, Ministry, NIN, White Zombie, some Tori Amos, etc...)
Dr Awesome (Score:1)
Not too many lyrics (Score:1)
80's (Score:1)
What and how... (Score:1)
For coding that requires problem-solving and deep concentration, I've found Tangerine Dream to be the most relaxing and quick to put me in "the zone" when coding. The same can be said of moderate classical, romantic, baroque, classic japanese, and some pop like 'til Tuesday or The Bangles. Grunt coding works with just about anything; I prefer Rush, Yes, Living Color, and a few others, but it doesn't really matter when the coding doesn't require much creativity.
vocal music impedes concentration (Score:1)
although, if i forget to take my meds in the morning, even techno can get distracting! but thats just me
Keyboard not found.
the list... (Score:1)
Rock: Dave Matthews, Jamiroquai, Steely Dan..etc
Other: Tori Amos, Ani Difranco, Sarah McLachlan..etc
Mobb Deep (Score:1)
Argh.
Gimme somodat FUNK! (Score:1)
NIN, Offspring, Dave Matthews Band, etc. (Score:1)
My personal favorites while banging out code include:
- NIN (The Fragile (great!!!) and Downward Spiral)
- Offspring (Americana)
- Metallica (Metallica (the black album))
- Chumbawamba (Tubthumper)
- Red Hot Chili Peppers (random MP3s)
- Random techno (Digital Empire 1, Orbital (In Sides), Crystal Method)
And some other stuff for more relaxed, contemplative coding sessions:
- Dave Matthews Band (Luther College, Red Rocks, Before These...)
- Louis Prima (Capitol Collectors Series)
- Eric Clapton (Unplugged)
- Bare Naked Ladies (Stunt)
I've been known to listen to Yanni as well when I'm in a really weird mood.
The best coding music comes from the net... (Score:1)
There isn't much need to say more. You want fast code? You have to listen to music that has some tempo too it. Anything less than 160 bpm is too slow to code too.
The answer is "techno" (last had no text) (Score:2)
'course, i'm all prissy about it. while i do like tekno, mostly i prefer some form of trance.
for hard core, one with the computer, nerdvana type coding, good hard psy-trance or goa is PERFECT. for those who havn't heard it, try astral projection, growling mad scientists, x-dream, hallucinogen, noosphere.. an the list goes on and on.
harder trance is wonderful, too.
'course, i tend to just listen to what i want to hear. which usually is one of the above, but it doesn't keep me from throwing in a melodic trance mix and getting distracted by ecsatic builds every once in while ;) or just listening to something completely different, and forgetting about electronic music for a little while
i feel obligated to insert "Talking about music is like dancing about architechture" here, cause i don't feel like i can even begin to express my thoughts about most of that music. It's another state of mind. . .
Autechre, Squarepusher... anything Warpish (Score:1)
Jazz or 70's rock for the queter moments.
What I listen to... (Score:1)
Recently, its been Joy Division (Substance, the "Ideal for living" tracks,) Husker Du, Spot 1019, Cake, Rube Waddell, the Mermen, Corduroy, the Meices, the Jesus and Mary Chain, Me First and the Gimme gimmies, The Fall (early stuff, Perverted By Language, Dragnet, Live at the Witch Trials, Grotesque) The Gang of Four, BIG BLACK (without whon NIN would not exist), the Butthole Surfers, the Sinister Six, Nirvana, the Spacemen 3, Beck, The Minutemen!!!!!... Oh shit, I could really go on for a long time here, but I have to stop.
Cheers
Eric
Tori Amos (Score:1)
Goa all the way (Score:1)
Re:Dr Awesome (Score:1)
just my 2 1/4 cents
-MoOsEb0y
whatever I'm into at the moment (Score:1)
[0] "Off Ramp" - Pat Metheney
[1] "2112" - Rush
[2] "Ride The Lightning" - Metallica
[3] "Angst" - KMFDM
[4] "Amused To Death" - Roger Waters
Of course, there are plenty more, but those 5 come to mind immediately. Off Ramp and other old Metheney albums are clear winners for me.
My Musical Progression (Score:1)
Mornings consist of The Wall, Darkside of the Moon, Zeppelin Box Set, Steve Miller Greatest Hits, some CCR, and some Rolling Stones.
This gets me halfway through the afternoon, at which time I need some motivation. So then comes NIN (The Fragile), KoRn, Limp Biskit, Kid Rock, and some new stuff.
Then it's off to home for baseball/hockey/football tv.
PanterA (Score:1)
Why, any music without understandable words (Score:1)
Nirvanna counts in this respect, too. Can YOU understand their lyrics? I sure can't.
Re:The answer is "techno" (last had no text) (Score:1)
as for other trance stuff, i like antiloop, man with no name, and of course, underworld!
mmm...
--Siva
Keyboard not found.
My Personal Selections (Score:1)
Marduk
Dark Tranquillity
In Flames
Children Of Bodom
Opera IX
Dismal Euphony
Dimmu Borgir
Gehenna
Limbonic Art
Elend
Music To Debug Code By (Score:1)
Styles range from jazz, to synthpop, to chart pop, to classical music.
Current music (no laughing please):
BR
Joel.
(Happily going through the CD collection now!)
Switch it up... (Score:1)
Re:Britney! (Score:2)
As long as you write good code, it really doesn't matter what you listen too. Its all about what makes you happy, and what inspires you to greater heights of creativity.
Cheers
Eric Geyer
corduroy@sfo.com
Perl Music (Score:1)
Nothing like a little SMG '[R]evolution' to get you in the mood to debug.
- Darchmare
- Axis Mutatis, http://www.axismutatis.net
NPR (Score:2)
You could widen the question to "What do you listen to?", instead of focusing on music. At my recent cubicle job, I used to listen to NPR just about constantly, because their programs are just so good. (see npr.org [npr.org] ). This has two advantages:
1) NPR programs are very in-depth and geeky, focusing on everything from sociology to interviews with Nobel winners (don't forget Science Friday, with its delightful coverage that perfectly caps the last weekday at work).
2) It drowns out the cubicle chatter of your co-workers. Mine were pretty inane, and keeping the headphones on served a dual purpose....
I think NPR is pretty much the only quality station around on FM.
A couple of other points - normally I've found FM reception in cubicles to be really bad, probably due to electromagnetic interference. Any way around this? AM sucks even more, I think.
Also, while driving around, my pref. choice is still NPR, but I sometimes tune in to AM stations to listen to the chatter. For some reason, a lot of AM stations tend to air sensational right wing stuff, but it's amusing to listen to (not to mention giving an insight into the Rush Limbaugh fans at work).
I also like it that NPR's web site archives stuff on Real Audio, which makes it really fun for searching and listening to whatever you feel like. I guess it's the precursor to video-on-demand, and though I like what I hear, for some reason, it still doesn't have the appeal of fresh live broadcast.
L.
Re:Why, any music without understandable words (Score:1)
certainly! but i guess it helps that i like to sing along a lot...CERTAINLY NOT in front of anyone though!
--Siva
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80's Techno, anyone? (Score:1)
Anyway, can anyone recommend any bands? I mean, all I can find on CDNow and stuff are the 90's electronica/techno stuff. I have no clue what techno bands were around and good bain the, say, early-mid (or even late) 80's. I'd love for someone to help me find some.
Thanks!
Delerium and friends. (Score:1)
I don't know, it works for me. *shrugs*
Sarah McLachlan is nice too....but that's more 'read slashdot' music... :-P
Primussucks! (Score:1)
put the dish on "EuroStyle" then get in the groove (Score:1)
by the way.. i have dish network so euro style is the name.. and its anything from house to techno and some stops inbetween with trance and the like.. its good stuff..
achates
-sig goes here
----
Progressive Trance (Score:1)
just my thoughts.
Music? (Score:4)
cat somelameproject/*.c >
***bzzt*crackle***
It doesnt last very long tho'
Re:None (Score:1)
Yeah, but for a very long time I worked in a noisy office with few barriers between people's workspaces. I would pick up whatever conversation was going on nearby, and that would destroy whatever concentration I had. What worked best for me for intense conversation was music I liked so much that I had listened to it a zillion times. It formed a background I could both absorb and ignore, while it silenced all the external distractions. Some CDs I could get all the way through without really hearing at all, which was perfect for what I was looking for.
Cheers
Eric Geyer
corduroy@sfo.com
Re:The Pixies (Score:1)
classic prog rock (Score:1)
Beatles.
Led Zeppelin.
King Crimson.
Pink Floyd.
Artists and albums that discourage the swapping of CDs because it would feel nearly criminal to disrupt the story/mood the album develops as a whole.
Particularly Dark Side, The Wall, and Wish you were Here.
Man that's great music
Absolutley no other possibility! (Score:1)
Negativland!
Nothing beats free music to do free code (Score:1)
the music scene rules:
there's no greetings order
don't forget the very good individuals, they are too many too list... check ftp.scene.org/pub/music/artists/ [scene.org]
get active...
Re:Metal/Industrial/Synthpop/Gothic and a bit clas (Score:1)
Dance music (Score:1)
Otherwise, a lot of 80's dance stuff - Bananarama, Corey Hart, Men without Hats, Berlin (anybody here besides me remember Berlin's "The Metro"?), Blondie, Prince (before you needed Unicode to write his name), among others.
I do listen to other kinds of music - French bands, classics, old punk, mushy 80's stuff that makes me all nostalgic, even some grunge. And some contemporary pop. But it does me no good when I code. If it doesn't have a beat, it does me no good at work.
Re:depends on what I'm writing (Score:1)
Rhythm is Everything (Score:1)
Some favorite examples include Frank Zappa, Phish, Metallica, Rush. Although some of the more vocal-oriented Zappa is overly distracting.
Janis Joplin, Village People, Tricky... (Score:1)
TECHNO / TRANCE (Score:1)
Nowadays, when I'm coding I love listening to "trance", club or house mixes, or just plain old techno. I just feel that Rock and Pop have pretty much outlived its welcome and has gotten very, very stale. After listening to the same thing over and over again, you really do need a break.
Another thing about techno or trance music is that since its rooted in raving (15+ hour long dances), it does in a way help you keep up and wanting to move in some manner. OTOH, I may have just popped too much E ; )
Anyway, if anybody wants to go give this genre a try, I suggest:
Paul Van Dyk (almost everything)
Amokk (especially "666")
The Crystal Method
ATB (if "9pm" doesn't get you going, nothing will)
Fatboy Slim House Mixes
Ian Ossia
Da Klubb Kings
John Debo
John Wink
and of couse, then Vengaboys ; )
As a quick note, try to listen to the originals before the listening to the remixes, IMHO there are some horrible remixes out there.
also check out: news://alt.binaries.sounds.mp3.dance [sounds.mp3.dance]
Enjoy !
Try Wagner and Napster (Score:1)
If you have not met Napster, give it a try at http://www.napster.com. They are working on a _nix port, but at the moment it requires Windows. They claim to have had 13 Terabytes of searchable MP3s available at one point. This kind of self-aggregating searchable democracy is the future for all media forms. Hooray!
Napster also has a feature where you can list the directory of another user's MP3s; this is really powerful if you find a user with a song you like, you can find out what else he or she likes and try that out.
That guy who listened to NPR, it is very good (although a pale imitation of the BBC's Radio 4); but I find it impossible to concentrate on speech while writing or designing code. Trying to split my attention like that sets my teeth on edge and makes purple veins come out on my head.
-Andy
typically yard stuff (Score:2)
Nine Inch Nails
Marilyn Manson
Rage Against The Machine
Stabbing Westward
Also appearing:
Violent Femmes
Revrend Horton Heat
Chemical Brothers
Vast
Local H
And of course: "Space Ghost's Musical BBQ" and "Space Ghost's Surf and Turf"
I like... (Score:1)
----------------
"Great spirits have always encountered violent opposition from mediocre minds." - Albert Einstein
Sublime! (and other eclectic stuff) (Score:1)
When I'm writing Perl all day, I like to crank up my Sublime bootlegs (all mp3) in my headphones. My favorite coding music is the version of "40oz to Freedom" off the "Contact Buzz" cd. That, and "I Love My Dog" off of the same disc. You can't beat the reggae groove bassline for coding. Sometimes I even kinda dance a little bit in my chair while I'm listening to it.
Other favorites while working are:
The Samples (check out my The Samples mp3 archive! ftp.blueaspen.com [blueaspen.com] )
1960s and 1970s country music. ("Foggy Mountain Breakdown" by Lester Flatt and Earl Skruggs, "Coal Miner's Daughter" by Loretta Lynn, and, of course, "East Bound and Down" which is the theme to Smokey and the Bandit. I forget the guys name...)
Dwight Yoakam (the "LIVE" cd or anything off of "Just Looking For a Hit")
Ben Harper (any of his cds)
Robert Earl Keen (each and everyone one of his CDs!)
Spearhead ("Home")
2pac
Jimi Hendrix
Too $hort
Snoop Doggy Dogg
The Ziggens
Afro Cuban All-Stars
BR5-49
Lots of rare Dave Matthews
Guy Clark
Jimmy Buffett
Toots and the Maytals
Rusted Root
Frank Sinatra (my current musical "kick")
and of course, Elvis
Nope, I'm not eclectic at all.
Situation Dependent (Score:1)
Racing to meet a deadline:
Pantera
NIN
Machinehead
Front 242
(other fast, aggressive metal/industrial.)
Low octane hacking:
Lagwagon
Vandals
Cake
No Use For A Name
Live
80's hair metal
Playing with code:
Jimmy Buffet
Garth Brooks
Orbital
Pietasters
Classical-type-stuff
The Orb
This is by no means absolute.
=-=-=-=-=-=
Re:TECHNO / TRANCE (Score:1)
Prodigy
Rammstein
Moby
Forgive me lord for I have sinned ; )
Kraftwerk (Score:1)
The top being Kraftwerk [kraftwerk.com].
These guys are old school synth. With songs like Home Computer, and Pocket Calculator, you help but feel this music was designed to code by.
Their website is super sweet too. Kraftwerk being an late 70s, early 80s band, has excellent green screen hi-res graphics all over their site. The graphics are kind of stuff that reminds me of the plot function of BASIC, running on an Apple IIe.
IMHO, they are the greatest and most influential band since the beatles, rolling stones era. Today's artists are still sampling their beats.
I'm sure they're not to hard to find on MP3. Remember that these guys predate the IBM XT and Mac. They are the grandfathers of electronic music.
-kyri
Bach Art of tbe Fugue (Score:2)
OT: Hey, is anyone else surprised that an article posted ~4:00 AM EDT should get 90 comments in an hour? Or am I being too US-centric?
Re:NPR (Score:1)
Check it out at the NPR front page:
http://www.npr.org [npr.org]
Off the top of my head.... (Score:2)
Pavement (currently)
Moxy Fruvous
Mr. Bungle
The Dentists
The Monks
Frank Zappa
They Might Be Giants
Drums and Tuba
Beth Orton
The Dead Milkmen
Midnight Oil
The Tragically Hip
Ned's Atomic Dustbin
Bjork
Frank Black
The Pixies
Mac Swanky Trio
and anything on Aztech Eccentrica (http://mp3.aztech-cs.com:8000).
---------------
Bach or Bruckner (Score:2)
For more romantic stuff, try Bruckner (or possibly Mendelssohn or Schumann - say the ``Children Scenes''). By all means avoid Wagner and Tchaikovsky: very beautiful, but it will distract you from your code. Some pieces by Brahms (variations on a theme by Haydn for example) can be fine, too.
I code to a broad range of music... (Score:2)
My favorite coding music:
Nine Inch Nails (The Fragile is excellent)
Propellerheads
Chemical Brothers
Ben Folds Five
Garbage
Jim's Big Ego
Cibo Matto
Led Zeppelin
Fluke
Oddly enough, I've found that listening to NIN while I do my math homework actually makes me work faster and more accurately. Strange, strange, strange.
As far as sound setups go, I prefer speakers + sub to headphones, although a good set of headphones with nice bass will do when I'm at work or something and don't want to bother people. I like it a lot better when my sub shakes the paint off my wall though.
Also, I do the best code when I'm dead tired. Which means that I generally stay up all night coding, because I don't tend to get tired until around 4am. Once I get tired, I dip into my endless supply of Mountain Dew and keep right on coding until I feel satisfied that I've gotten something done. Then I sleep for an hour and go to school...
Re:Bach or Bruckner (Score:2)
I'd second the idea that Tchaikovsky isn't good coding music. As I said, I like to listen to music with contrapuntal and harmonic intricacy when coding, and, let's face it -- Tchaikovsky doesn't have that much to offer there, at least compared to some of the other composers mentioned. That's not to say that it's bad music -- I'm quite looking forward to playing the Tchaik 5 in the spring. But it ain't deep-thinking, focus-your-mind music.
Only the best! For the best... (Score:2)
Wesley Willis! (Score:2)
--
Interested in XFMail? New XFMail home page [slappy.org]
Building a perfect office antenna (Score:2)
I found this to be a good solution as I work inside a building with masses of iron, gigantic copper reels, and other enemies of radio wave propagation.
Most of the time an additional length of antenna works well. Also, where it is placed makes a large difference. The wavelength of the FM band effectively makes dead spots every half a wavelength where it cancels out at the antenna.
The FM band is also highly reflective, so placing your antenna a certain distance from a length of grounded wire can effectively amplify your signal strength. For an industrial strength solution in an industrial building, your best bet may be to sneak one of those rooftop yagi [wcrb.com] antennas from RadioScrap, hide and aim it around non conductive mass, like the wall of a cubicle.
If you wish to make your own stealth antennas on a cubicle wall disguised as artwork from pushpins and wire, there are many good books here [arrl.org]. If someone can find a good web based yagi design calculator, please let me know!
Silence (Score:3)
I play too many instruments- any music worth a damn tends to make me sing/drum/play along with it or at least _think_ it so powerfully that there's no way I can code.
Oddly enough, I have found a sound I can code to, it's just a disturbing sound. Occasionally I will listen to the satellites just beyond the 30-meter shortwave band. It's a roaring electronic noise with rumble and an alien electronic twitter overlaid on it, and will happily continue for hours without a break like an 'environments' record. The fact that it is really abrasive bothers me not at all
Re:Eclectic. (Score:2)
I suspect quite a few; most people I work with have a pretty wide range of musical tastes. People often comment on the CDs on my desk, which include Wesley Willis, Jean-Luc Ponty, Ween, The Judds, Camper van Beethoven, Anthrax, Joe Satriani, Robert Johnson and King's X.
I also like Beastie Boys, Rush...and Bluegrass. :-)
About the only music I don't like is pop, adult contemporary and hip-hop.
--
Interested in XFMail? New XFMail home page [slappy.org]
Depends on when (Score:2)
Something unobtrusive. Eno, Lustmord, Global Communication.
Implementation:
Something meatier to keep me moving. Autechre (really anything on the Warp label), Juno Reactor, Empirion.
Debugging:
This varies the most of all. No music at all, sometimes. Sometimes kinda crazy stuff, maybe -ziq. Or Portishead?
Usually when it's extremely late (early?) I feel the need to switch over to either very loud thumpy stuff, or very ambient stuff (the Aphex Twin's SAW2, for instance). Both help me stay awake.
The real question.. (Score:3)
Example: Song you are not in the mood for comes on, so you stop work for a second and press skip and go back to work, but just before your brain switches back to code mode another song you don't want to here right now comes on and you must stop work again.
The tradiotnal solution to this is playlists, but it is easy to have too many MP3s to use them effectivly.. or just not understand your own lissening habits.
The solution I came up with is to use a primitive AI (well not really, but almost) to try and learn my lissening habits for me. It also shows you the next 20 songs it is going to play and allows you to cancel them from the list BEFORE they start playing.. this makes an incredible diffrence in the ammount of time you waist skipping songs in random play mode. You can check out the Perl source to smartplay [gtf.org], but be forewarned it is proof of concept.. and not really all that stable or polished. Plus, it takes a while to really learn anyhitng about you, but maybe someday someone who really knows something about AI will pick up the idea.
Related to efficency: There is music out there, like Brian Eno, which is specifically designed (well.. sorta) to make you more productive (well.. sorta). The idea being that the music removes destractions (well.. sorta). I personally lissen to Techno since it seems to fit in well with the mind set required for programming. If your a Techno hater you should try lissening to it while your programming.. I've seen people made into Techno fans this way.
Jeff
Brain efficiency (Score:2)
Since there have been so many studies in the past that say that ppeoppple work better on technical things without music on, it makes one wonder why this is so.
I have come to the ppppppersonal conclusion that hacking is more of an artistic task, as opppposed to technical.
The other thing I've considered is that pprogrammers are actually more dual-brained, or rather, more able to use the left and right side at the same time. Whether this is due to higher intelliiigence or just more of a logical/emotiional ballance, I couldn't tell you. III'd tend to veer towards a combination of both, at least in my situation.
I have come to the point that I _need_ music in order to work optimally. I'll sit in class, and start tapping out a beat. (This may be due to the fact that I'm a drummer, too. :)) I'll get distracted if my whole braiin isn't working.
As far as listening preferance, II'll listen to most anything, albeit adultery(country) western, rap, and pop. The mood I'm in usually determines what I'll listen to. For those Dew-induced frenzies at 5AM, I'll usually pick up some punk - MxPx, Ninety Pound Wuss, etc. For several hours after school, when I'm really pissed off, I'll take some good ol' emocore or hardcore, such as Tourniquet, Strong Arm, Living Sacrifice, etc. When I'm just waking up, at about 9, pretty much anything goes, but techno stuff is at oppppptimality. techno Goth and hardcore techno seem to work best here. Goth opppera iiis great for those introspective, creative GIMP sessions.
Just my .000002% of Mr. Franklin... Iignore repeated letters - my keyboard is dying!
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CAIMLAS
Re:Silence (Score:2)
That's true for me as well -- in most contexts. Indeed, I tend to sing/drum/play to the music in my head even when there's none ambient.
But after a few minnutes of coding I get so absorbed in what I'm doing that I'll scarcely notice that any CD I might have started has finished, and I may go for the rest of the night without putting another one in.
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It's October 6th. Where's W2K? Over the horizon again, eh?
A metacomment, if you will. (Score:4)
It seems that everyone wants to get their two obols in, but hardly anyone cares what anyone else is saying. [Not to imply that I'm any different!]
Actually, it looks like a poll where all the votes have to be write-in votes. A nice idea, in fact, though we need a pattern matcher to go through and generate summary results. [Are you reading, Rob?]
It would be nice to start doing polls like this: generate a free-for-all like the current one, run stats on it after a few days, and then post the summary in the (former) "poll" box, for further discussion of the actual results.
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It's October 6th. Where's W2K? Over the horizon again, eh?
Orbital. Art of Noise. (Score:2)
Re:The answer is "techno" (last had no text) (Score:2)
Klingon Opera (Score:2)
Power Metal (Score:2)
You generally can't go wrong with metal, but when I wanna code all night, there's one sub-genre that stands head and shoulders above the rest: Power Metal. What that? Well.. Judas Priest defined it in the 70s, Helloween and others refined it in the 80s, and Gamma Ray carries the torch into the 90s (along with a few dozen other bands in orbit around them). The melody, the speed -- it all comes down to raw energy pouring into your brain through the ear canal -- the perfect complement to caffeine. Rob Halford almost deserves his name in the credits sometimes...
Oh, I said you can't go wrong with metal, but for coding, that's a lie. No Type O Negative! No Anathema! No My Dying Bride! Keep that kind of stuff away from the computer. Speedy and Happy are best.
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Techno: Talla 2 XLC, DJ Taucher (Score:2)
Check these
http://www.talla.de [talla.de] (Talla 2 XLC one of the best DJs)
http://www.djtaucher.de [djtaucher.de] (Taucher [=Diver] also very strong)