Ask HN: Do you listen to anything while working?
I have found that music (and sound in general) can be a very powerful tool to help focus. But it goes both ways. Listening to the right, repetitive song or noises can help me achieve my focused "flow state" much faster. Conversely, listening to new music, music with lyrics, or any irregular noises will destroy my concentration pretty fast.
For me, I think it comes down to isolating myself from unexpected stimuli while trying to focus. Listening to a video game song on loop, relatively loudly to block out external noise, is something that has worked well for me.
However, everybody is different. Do you listen to music / white noise / etc while working? If so, what's your go-to?
28 comments
[ 2.8 ms ] story [ 74.5 ms ] threadBut I can't have silence, so I get as close as possible by using a noise generator, and a set of earphones that really do block out external noises.
I can't stand music when I need to concentrate or do any work really, even if it's "just" reading over a bug report, triaging it etc. The only time I might use music is when there's a long enough repetitive task where I would just get bored while doing it otherwise. There's not many of those tasks or at least not long enough that spending time finding music for it would be a good use of time. I can probably count on my fingers how many times I've done this.
Even white noise is something that I can't stand. I might be able to drown out various types of white noise (like I forgot about the noise from the mini split heater while typing the above paragraph. But as I started thinking about what to write about white noise, both the mini split white noise and the fridge running noise came crashing into my mind and annoyed me.
I really like frosty winter, where I can have the fireplace on and turn off the blower. If the fridge is off, that's as close to a perfect moment as I can get to noise wise at home. You hear the cracking of the fireplace but not much else.
HVAC at the office? Immensely annoying! Especially if trying to actually concentrate. My mind will easily wander to and concentrate on the HVAC humm.
When the heater/fridge turn off, I can actually feel like a weight is lifted off my ears.
Also, I don’t mind playing two or more videos simultaneously by mixing different types, e.g. (ambience, asmr, music) in some volume combination. It helps not only to mask the environment, but with proper lighting may also take you to a completely different place.
Just low enough to burble audibly and tune in if there's a song I want to pay attention to, and quiet enough to provide whatever white noise my brain requires for flow state stuff.
I've tried all the other things... and I don't really use albums or playlists because there's always something to contend with and invite the process of making choices. For me, it's best to either go "eclectic rock is working", and if it's not then "let's hear something more electronic".
Not having to think harder about it works well for me.
If I'm writing code or doing something active like that, the above applies, but add heavy metal to the list of things I might be listening to. But if I'm listening to metal it's almost always only bands and songs that I'm extremely familiar with (eg, have listened to a given song hundreds or thousands of times in my life) as those are less likely to be distracting to me, as opposed to something new where I feel obligated to really pay attention to the music.
One other option is I will sometimes put on a movie that I've watched many, many, many times (eg, The Matrix, Hackers, Antitrust, Tron:Legacy, The Social Network, Rad, Vision Quest, etc) minimize the viewer window and just have the audio in my headphones.
Very rarely I might go with some sort of basically "white noise" track like
"Howling snowstorm and crackling fire" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=volQGswo3dg
"Cyberpunk city sounds" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x5zX1eRKEDM&
"Twin Peaks Double R Diner" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=npVellnR6D8
"Coffee shop" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VMAPTo7RVCo (unless I'm actually sitting in a real-life coffee shop, which I quite often am)
etc.
I've found SiIvagunner works well for this, they release like ~10 new song mashups a day and maybe half of them are good. Just load up some random youtube playlist consisting of thousands of songs and I won't recognize a single one of them.
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC9ecwl3FTG66jIKA9JRDtmg
If I really gotta get down to business, then it's one of their Liquid DnB mix shows. The high energy, repetitive songs that flow into each other really help.
Sometimes I'll even listen to music while on a call just to help myself focus lol
I use the 'chillout' station via di.fm for most of my work.. good beats, 96% no words for hours usually. It'll sometimes throw a tune that annoys and I'll click over to the 'melodic progressive' (99% no words and a bit more upbeat usually) channel for a bit.
I pay for commercial free and get access to the other site with all the mainstream genres as well.
Nice in that can switch to 'trance', vocal trance, or similar upbeat station for cleaning / cooking and others for total chill like ambient when needed.
Enjoy it via the desktop computer and phone app.
Nice that it uses way less bandwidth than youtube, loved them since they were 'digitally imported' - now wondering if it's them I used few times with winamp way back in the day.
Still great and used almost every day. This may be my most value per dollar purchase every year.
To avoid having YouTube website open while working and to maximize productivity, I use ytpodcast[0] to convert the youtube videos to podcast and add them to a listen later playlist and finally I listen them later on Apple podcast app on MacOS or iPhone.
[0] https://ytpodcast.com
I don't know if the sounds generated are actually helping or not (could totally be a placebo), however it's a seamless way to enter flow state, I've found. I've been using it for ~4 years now, and it very very rarely fails to deliver.
If I am working on something mechanical where I know exactly what I need to do and it's only a matter of getting from point a to point b (like writing code in a familiar domain that I know like the back of my hand or writing tests) then I can listen to music or podcasts (although only podcasts that I am ok with missing large chunks off as I tend to zone out of podcasts if I am listening to them while working).
For parts where I have to think, I listen to nothing.
Sometimes I'm just not in the mood, and the heavy metal helps a lot with that. I can't really listen to it while coding, so I might just open a whole music video and see if it snaps me awake.
If the task gets more complicated, I drop the podcast/financial market thing. If it gets even more complicated, I stop the music.