This looks decent but not so great when using large sized fonts. I have yet to find a better font for my terminal than NanumGothic (http://dev.naver.com/projects/nanumfont/download). It was created from a large Korean web company called Naver and I love the horizontal spacing especially when using larger sized fonts (ie size 16 and above since I like fonts large on terminal)
This is great, and I'll use this while working. I love certain sounds, but not every types of noise, so it's great to be able to choose the combination.
There's a lot of ASMR youtube videos, which I find very relaxing and helps to get in the zone. However, sometimes it also helps me to fall asleep, which is bad when I want to work. Anyway, ASMR puts me in a state that is highly focused and relaxed at the same time.
I worked at ER. No, you don't want to have a baby in ER. ER doctors are dealing with emergency situations and patients (auto accident,cardiac arrests,gunshot wounds,etc). I've seen one baby being delivered in ER, and it wasn't a good experience for the patient. Rather, you'd want proper pre-natal care and comfortable delivery room, with your own doctor. Also, ER treatments are more expensive. Way more expensive.
I use Great Suspender extension for Chrome, which allows me to unload the tab, so it doesn't tax the memory. Then I can selectively open the tab when I'm ready to read. Otherwise, my 100+ tabs will create havoc, and slow down the Chrome to a crawl.
Some interesting music/audio for coding:
1. ambient sounds of star trek lcars (http://www.lcarscom.net/) and the repetitive beeping noise.
2. classic video game music on NES, like Super Mario Bros., Zelda
3. ASMR (search youtube) works wonder for those are affected by it. It puts the listener into a super-relaxed state, which can only be described as tingling or extreme pleasure for the brain.
4. Office Sound Effects (http://www.amazon.com/Offices-Sound-Effects/dp/B008HKONNA)
I've transferred about half of my domains from godaddy to namecheap at the end of last year. It looks like I have a great excuse to transfer the rest of them now.
Doom was the reason for building my first PC. Anyway, many years later, I read and studied doom source code, mostly to see how the game engine worked. I had it printed out on paper and read it line by line and found it to be very readable, and even entertaining.