Tag Archive for Music

Rockin’ at the Office

Rockin' at the OfficeAfter the COVID-19 lockdowns, there is a “new normal” emerging in the workplace. The pandemic changed a lot of things, including the nature of office work. In the old workplace, the firm’s focus was worker productivity. However, the pandemic has shown that health is important as it allows staff to work better. One of the things that should change in the new normal work environment is music in the office.

Music at the office helps keep focus There are a number of benefits of listening to music  Music is not just a source of pleasure but there are benefits for the employer and the employee from listening to music at work.

Music at the office helps keep focus

The modern job can be a drudge. The mundane day-to-day office tasks can drag down most people. To make the office more stressful, 70% of U.S. office space is open concept. The open workspaces’ lack of privacy can make the office people feel stressed and decrease their productivity. 

Music at the office helps keep focusIn order to offset the lack of privacy, firms should allow employees to plug in their earphones and listen to music. Listening to music can help the cube dwellers feel happier and more productive. Background music enhances performance on cognitive tasks, improves accuracy, and enables the completion of repetitive tasks more efficiently. 

Researchers studying how background music affects performance on repetitive tasks found it boosted efficiency. Music in the background while working can help a person concentrate better. Research shows that music can help in improving the processing speed of the brain. This is especially true if you can choose your own music. Office workers that are allowed to listen to their preferred choice of music complete tasks more quickly and come up with better ideas than those who have no control over their sound environment. So, next time when you are working make sure to play some music in the background that will help in boosting your mental performance.

Fight stress at work with music

Fight stress at work with musicMost employees feel job-related stress. Music can be an easy and effective stress-buster. Research confirms that music around 60 beats per minute can cause the brain to synchronize with the beat causing alpha brainwaves (frequencies from 8 – 14 hertz or cycles per second). This alpha brainwave is what is present when we are relaxed and conscious. Researchers at Stanford University have said that “listening to music seems to be able to change brain functioning to the same extent as medication.” Listening to music also reduces stress by lowering the stress hormone cortisol

The effect of music on the memory

We all receive and process an avalanche of important and trivial information at work or on our own time. Where did I put my keys? Is that car going to stop? When is my next meeting? 

After a point, there is a saturation point of all human beings. When it becomes difficult to remember everything studies suggest that music is also very effective in improving and enhancing the memory of a person. However, this depends on a number of factors such as the type of music that you choose to listen to. Though there are positive results of people being able to remember better when they work listening to music, these results vary. As each of us is different and have different brain functioning.

Music in the office motivates

Music in the office motivatesWe have all been there. There are times when we lack the motivation to work around here it is frequently called February. When you lack the motivation to work, it is time to listen to some music. It is seen that when people listen to fast-paced music, it helps them feel motivated and helps a person work harder.

This is why people working out prefer listening to fast-paced music. Choosing the right tempo of the music leaves a deep impact on the brain and helps motivate a person. However, each person will have a different taste in music. 

Music has a positive impact on mood

There are times when a person can feel low. At such times, it can also affect the way we deal with clients and customers. Many studies show that listening to music can help in improving the mood of a person. One of the ways music affects mood is by stimulating the formation of certain brain chemicals. Listening to music increases the neurotransmitter dopamine.

Dopamine is produced in your body when you listen to a song you really like. It’s the same brain chemical responsible for the feel-good states obtained from eating chocolate, orgasm, or runner’s high. It is dopamine that could put you in a better mood at work and make you more productive. Increased dopamine can also improve your alertness and make you feel less tired.

Enjoying music stimulates the brain hormone oxytocin. Oxytocin has been called the “trust molecule” and the “moral molecule” since it helps us bond with and trust others. There’s evidence that the oxytocin bump experienced by music lovers can make them more generous and trustworthy

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Music leaves a deep impact on the minds of people. It is very effective in helping people feel focused on their tasks and stay productive all day long. Office employees seem to enjoy listening to music when they work as it helps with stress and getting better brain activity.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Walkman is 40

Updated 09/14/2019 – Sony is releasing a new Walkman. CNN says the 40th anniversary Walkman NW-A100TPS commemorative version is powered by Android. It has a USB-C port and up to 26 hours of battery life. That is more playing time than most smartphones can provide. It comes with a bunch of audiophile features including; S-Master HX digital amplifier, a DSEE HX processor, even a vinyl processor to give digital tracks the character of vinyl.

There will be a standard version, the Walkman NW-A105 for us mere mortals who can’t or won’t pay the commemorative. Price. cost and release date haven’t officially been announced.

Walkman is 4040 years ago Sony (SNE), not Apple, revolutionized the way we listen to music. The blue and silver Sony Walkman TPS-L2 was introduced in Japan on July 1, 1979. The original Walkman sold for around ¥33,000 ($150). For the first time, the Walkman let us take our music with us without bothering our neighbors. It replaced boomboxes and portable radios.

Walkman TPS-L2The Walkman wasn’t the first. It was the first affordable and manageable portable music player. German inventor Andreas Pavel’s Stereobelt was too clunky and expensive, so they never took off. Sony sold more than 50,000 in the first two monthsCNN reports that in its heyday, the Walkman was as synonymous with portable music players as Kleenex became to tissue and Xerox was to copy machines.

The Walkman came to the US in 1980

The Walkman was introduced to the U.S. in 1980 and continued to sell well even through the CD era. Innovation kept Sony on top of the market. The 1981 Walkman II was barely bigger than a cassette tape. 1984’s Discman helped Sony stay on top of the portable music world. Sony sold 385 million units between 1979 and 2009 Walkmans.

 WM-F5 Sports Walkman

My Walkman in college

Some argue that the Walkman finished off vinyl records. By the time the Walkman made its U.S. debut in 1980, the cassette was well on its way to overtaking vinyl. By 1983, cassettes were officially the best-selling format. at the Verge writes the Walkman was originally ridiculed for lacking the ability to record tapes. It was designed to play music. You could make a mixtape for your high-school sweetheart and listen to it together. The Walkman offered two 3.5mm headphone jacks (the same hardware that, until recently, found on the iPhone) in lieu of a speaker.

Apple iPod

The Verge notes that the Walkman’s popularity began to fade with the arrival of CDs. Its popularity was further eroded in 2001 after the introduction of the Apple iPod and digital downloads began to dominate. Tech historian Stewart Wolpin told USA Today that Sony could have dethroned Apple iPod and iTunes. He explained that Sony’s boss Sir Howard Stringer had completely siloed the company’s divisions so that the electronics business was kept separate from Sony’s recording and film divisions.

This kept Sony from building an iTunes/iPod-like integrated music player/music store solution … Sony would have been the only potential competitor to Apple had the Sony hardware and Sony content people been able to talk to each other.

 

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The 40th anniversary of the Walkman is not about nostalgia. The Walkman is important because before there was the Internet to change what people expected from life, there was the Walkman.

Music that was too daring for commercial radio or my parents in the early ‘80s made its way to me via cassettes made by other kids. Without the Walkman, I probably would never have learned of the B-52’s Rock Lobster, Black Sabbath’s War Pigs, or Iggy Pop and the StoogesRaw Power. The rise of the Walkman is the first loss of control that the recording industry still complains about.

Vintage Bang & Olufsen audio system.The Walkman also inhibited our social skills. It predicted the rise of iPhone culture, a world where eye contact is as obsolete as a Bang & Olufsen audio system.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Prince – Internet Pioneer

PPrince - Internet Pioneerrince‘s musical legacy is uncontested. TMZ summarized his career. Prince became an international superstar in 1982 after his breakthrough album “1999.” He went on to churn out a ton of hits — and racking up 7 Grammy’s in the process. He also performed at the Super Bowl in 2007, in one of the greatest live performances of all time.

Prince sold more than 100 million records during his career … and won the Academy Award for Best Original Song Score for Purple Rain in 1985. He penned hits for other artists like Nothing Compares 2 U for Sinéad O’Connor, the Bangles’ Manic Monday, Chaka Khan’s I Feel For You, and Stevie Nicks’sStand Back.”

In addition to his musical legacy, Prince was also an unheralded pioneer in the digital music world according to Twice. The article details five ways Prince helped shape the online music world.

Prince embraced the Internet before most

Prince‘s “Crystal Ball” album, a three-CD set he put out in 1998, was initially only available over the phone and via Internet pre-orders, making it one of the first-ever e-commerce music launches. The author recalls that those who ordered the album online got a fourth disc of previously unreleased acoustic material, “The Truth,” and a fifth disc of instrumental music by his New Power Generation Orchestra.

He helped invent e-commerce.

Prince helped invent e-commercePrince launched his own NPG Music Club to sell select albums exclusively online according to Twice. He even won a Webby Lifetime Achievement Award in 2006, identifying him as an e-commerce pioneer.

Prince was an early Internet troll

After record label Warner decided to take him on over money and creative control of his music in the early ’90s, Prince took to the Internet to fight back. The author writes that he made a number of appearances with the word “Slave” written on his face. When Warner fought back, informing him it even owned the name Prince, he changed his name to an unpronounceable symbol, forcing the world to ID him as “the Artist Formerly Known as Prince.”

One of the first to give his music away

Prince was one of the first artists to give his music awayIn 2007, Prince released “Planet Earth” and played an unprecedented 21 nights at the brand new O2 Arena in London. While in London, Princehatched a deal with The Mail to give the album for free to the newspaper’s 2 million readers. The blog points out that Prince neglected to tell record label Columbia of the deal. Columbia’s parent company, Sony, pulled the album’s release in the U.K.

Prince blazed an online path for other artists

Eventually, Prince shut down his NPG Music Club and launched LOtUSFLOW3R, which not only sold his music but tickets to his shows as well, outside the monopolies of the record companies and Ticketmaster. His early attempts to sell online and his fights with the traditional music powers left a big impression on British band Radiohead, then between major label contracts. Instead of settling on a new record label, the band released its album “In Rainbows” exclusively online, and allowed consumers to “pay what you like” for it, garnering a ton of mainstream press.

R.I.P. Prince, superstar musician, and Internet pioneer.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Not the Windows Startup You Knew

Not the Windows Startup You KnewMental Floss brought us the work of London-based musician Daniel John Jones who has experimented with slowing down the playback of an assortment of Windows start-up sounds. As part of a project on his Soundcloud page, he has slowed down a number of Windows start-up sounds by up to 4000 percent.

SoundcloudIn the case of Windows XP, the iconic sound takes on an eerie trance-like tone that lasts just shy of three minutes. Its build-up and dramatic payoff never seemed to make the pay-off when I started up my PC. Listen here.

The Windows 95 start-up sound, which lasts nearly 4 minutes takes on a new-agey mood with a sinister edge to it. Listen here.

The full collection of Jones’s Windows work can be found here.

 

Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.

Steve Jobs and Neil Young Planned Hi-Fi iPod

Steve Jobs and Neil Young Planned Hi-Fi iPodRock icon Neil Young took his campaign for higher-fidelity digital music to the stage of All Things D’s D: Dive Into Digital conference. The Huffington Post reports that the master of the one-note guitar solo says he was discussing a Hi-Fi iPod type device with the late Steve Jobs.

Steve Jobs didn't use his iPod at homeYoung said the Apple (AAPL) co-founder was such a fan of music that he didn’t use his iPod and its digitally compressed files at home. Instead, he used a physical format well-known to have better sound. “Steve Jobs was a pioneer of digital music. His legacy is tremendous,Young said. “But when he went home, he listened to vinyl (albums).

Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Young says that he spoke with Jobs about creating a high fidelity format that has 20 times better than files in the most current digital formats, including MP3.

Neil YoungSuch a format, he said, would contain 100 percent of the data of music as it is created in a studio, as opposed to 5 percent in compressed formats including Apple’s AAC. Each song would be huge, and a new storage and playback device might only hold 30 albums. Each song would take about 30 minutes to download, which is fine if you leave your device on overnight, he said. “Sleep well. Wake up in the morning. Play some real music and listen to the joy of 100 percent of the sound of music,” he said.

Although Young didn’t have a practical plan for developing such a format – saying it’s for “rich people” to decide – he said Jobs was on board with the idea before he died. “I talked to Steve about it. We were working on it,” Young said. “You’ve got to believe if he lived long enough he would eventually try to do what I’m trying to do.

Apple iPod NanoWalt Mossberg, a journalist with News Corp.’s All Things D website, which hosted Jobs at its conferences confirmed Young’s opinion of Jobs. Mossberg said Jobs expressed surprise that “people traded quality, to the extent they had, for convenience or price.

An Apple Inc. spokesperson declined to comment to the HuffPost.

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Ralph Bach has been in IT long enough to know better and has blogged from his Bach Seat about IT, careers, and anything else that catches his attention since 2005. You can follow him on LinkedInFacebook, and Twitter. Email the Bach Seat here.