ANC Headphones
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Can anyone recommend a pair for a very noisy office? My priorities (in order) are: 1) Noise cancelling needs to be seriously good 2) Noise leakage needs to be minimal/non-existent 3) Comfortable for long periods 4) As a bonus, it would be nice if they played music well but the real purpose is to shut out pneumatic drills, people who don't quite get the point of telephones and idiots who think that VCs should be conducted at 150 decibels. Bose QC35s and Sony WH1000s seem to be the top general picks around the net (it would be nice not to be spending £300 on an office accessory, though!) but it would be good to hear the thoughts of anyone who has a pair specifically for coding in bad office environments.
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
PeejayAdams wrote:
hear the thoughts of anyone who has a pair specifically for coding in bad office environments
I got the Bose specifically for this sort of environment. 1st month I blew my data usage on the phone using Jango I was wearing them so much. They are excellent. 2nd month I stocked the phone with my own music. The Bose seem to eliminate about 90% of the office chatter without requiring really loud rock to drown it out.
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH
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I have and like these -- UltraPhones – High Isolation Studio Headphones (29db)[^] The passive noise cancellation is better than any active NC I've ever heard, and doesn't require me to turn the music up loud to drown out anything. Only problem I have with them, is that I can't hear the building fire alarm if I have the music turned up even a little bit.
I live in Oregon, and I'm an engineer.
Did I read it correctly - they weigh 3lb! I got rid of a pair of Kiptch, they gave me a headache because they were so heavy and they were a dammed sight less than 1.5kg!
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity RAH
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A LART is a highly tempting option, but sadly, there are too many attitudes to readjust.
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
PeejayAdams wrote:
A LART is a highly tempting option, but sadly, there are too many attitudes to readjust.
*cough*
[The Seventy Maxims of Maximally Effective Mercenaries](http://schlockmercenary.wikia.com/wiki/The\_Seventy\_Maxims\_of\_Maximally\_Effective\_Mercenaries):
Maxim 6. If violence wasn’t your last resort, you failed to resort to enough of it.
Did you ever see history portrayed as an old man with a wise brow and pulseless heart, weighing all things in the balance of reason? Is not rather the genius of history like an eternal, imploring maiden, full of fire, with a burning heart and flaming soul, humanly warm and humanly beautiful? --Zachris Topelius Training a telescope on one’s own belly button will only reveal lint. You like that? You go right on staring at it. I prefer looking at galaxies. -- Sarah Hoyt
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Can anyone recommend a pair for a very noisy office? My priorities (in order) are: 1) Noise cancelling needs to be seriously good 2) Noise leakage needs to be minimal/non-existent 3) Comfortable for long periods 4) As a bonus, it would be nice if they played music well but the real purpose is to shut out pneumatic drills, people who don't quite get the point of telephones and idiots who think that VCs should be conducted at 150 decibels. Bose QC35s and Sony WH1000s seem to be the top general picks around the net (it would be nice not to be spending £300 on an office accessory, though!) but it would be good to hear the thoughts of anyone who has a pair specifically for coding in bad office environments.
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
This may be a crazy suggestion depending on your office environment, but maybe you could ask your company to pay for them. If they are genuinely increasing your productivity (distractions, mental health), it's probably an investment that would pay for itself quickly.
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Can anyone recommend a pair for a very noisy office? My priorities (in order) are: 1) Noise cancelling needs to be seriously good 2) Noise leakage needs to be minimal/non-existent 3) Comfortable for long periods 4) As a bonus, it would be nice if they played music well but the real purpose is to shut out pneumatic drills, people who don't quite get the point of telephones and idiots who think that VCs should be conducted at 150 decibels. Bose QC35s and Sony WH1000s seem to be the top general picks around the net (it would be nice not to be spending £300 on an office accessory, though!) but it would be good to hear the thoughts of anyone who has a pair specifically for coding in bad office environments.
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
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Can anyone recommend a pair for a very noisy office? My priorities (in order) are: 1) Noise cancelling needs to be seriously good 2) Noise leakage needs to be minimal/non-existent 3) Comfortable for long periods 4) As a bonus, it would be nice if they played music well but the real purpose is to shut out pneumatic drills, people who don't quite get the point of telephones and idiots who think that VCs should be conducted at 150 decibels. Bose QC35s and Sony WH1000s seem to be the top general picks around the net (it would be nice not to be spending £300 on an office accessory, though!) but it would be good to hear the thoughts of anyone who has a pair specifically for coding in bad office environments.
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
I'm using a QC15 and people have to shake my chair to get my attention when I have them on.
"Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana."
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I'm imagining a floor with 40 people with noise-cancelling phones, and how they react to a fire-alarm :D
Bastard Programmer from Hell :suss: If you can't read my code, try converting it here[^] "If you just follow the bacon Eddy, wherever it leads you, then you won't have to think about politics." -- Some Bell.
Actually, I can tell you just how they react. They lean in toward their monitor, they hunch their shoulders. Then I stand up and shout, "That's a FIRE ALARM!" They look around confusled for a minute, and then go to the door to get out. They are really surprised when there is smoke in the hallway.
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Can anyone recommend a pair for a very noisy office? My priorities (in order) are: 1) Noise cancelling needs to be seriously good 2) Noise leakage needs to be minimal/non-existent 3) Comfortable for long periods 4) As a bonus, it would be nice if they played music well but the real purpose is to shut out pneumatic drills, people who don't quite get the point of telephones and idiots who think that VCs should be conducted at 150 decibels. Bose QC35s and Sony WH1000s seem to be the top general picks around the net (it would be nice not to be spending £300 on an office accessory, though!) but it would be good to hear the thoughts of anyone who has a pair specifically for coding in bad office environments.
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
I wear these most every day: COWIN E7 Active Noise Cancelling Bluetooth Headphones ~ 60-70 through AMAZON. I also stream "brown noise" through an app called AMBIO, to help focus and drown out more sound. This is the only way I can concentrate on coding in my office. People who drop in the office also see the headphones on and tend to turn and come back later.
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Can anyone recommend a pair for a very noisy office? My priorities (in order) are: 1) Noise cancelling needs to be seriously good 2) Noise leakage needs to be minimal/non-existent 3) Comfortable for long periods 4) As a bonus, it would be nice if they played music well but the real purpose is to shut out pneumatic drills, people who don't quite get the point of telephones and idiots who think that VCs should be conducted at 150 decibels. Bose QC35s and Sony WH1000s seem to be the top general picks around the net (it would be nice not to be spending £300 on an office accessory, though!) but it would be good to hear the thoughts of anyone who has a pair specifically for coding in bad office environments.
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
I've been using the Bose QuietComfort 20i Acoustic Noise Cancelling Headphones for the last 6 months for the same reason. Better noise canceling than the over ear QC15s I use at home, in-ear so they aren't obtrusive, very comfortable even after wearing for hours at a time, the battery lasts a long time and I think the sound is great. I hesitated because of the price but I've been very happy with the quality and service from Bose. An added bonus is that they stay in my ears very well when I'm working out or working in the yard. T You don't want to be wearing them when the car door closes! The way the headphones work with the sudden pressure increase is rather unpleasant! :omg:
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This may be a crazy suggestion depending on your office environment, but maybe you could ask your company to pay for them. If they are genuinely increasing your productivity (distractions, mental health), it's probably an investment that would pay for itself quickly.
It's taken about 5 years even to convince them that they're a useful thing and I feel the agreement to let me use them is a somewhat reluctant one. It all goes back to a couple of idiots long before my time who rather took the proverbial with their use of headphones and the politics have become rather entrenched over the years.
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.
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I've been using the Bose QuietComfort 20i Acoustic Noise Cancelling Headphones for the last 6 months for the same reason. Better noise canceling than the over ear QC15s I use at home, in-ear so they aren't obtrusive, very comfortable even after wearing for hours at a time, the battery lasts a long time and I think the sound is great. I hesitated because of the price but I've been very happy with the quality and service from Bose. An added bonus is that they stay in my ears very well when I'm working out or working in the yard. T You don't want to be wearing them when the car door closes! The way the headphones work with the sudden pressure increase is rather unpleasant! :omg:
OffCenter wrote:
You don't want to be wearing them when the car door closes! The way the headphones work with the sudden pressure increase is rather unpleasant! :OMG:
Really? Is that something that would be even more marked with 'planes and railway tunnels?
98.4% of statistics are made up on the spot.