Behind the Story of the iPhone's Default Text Tone 102
An anonymous reader writes "In a fascinating post from Kelly Jacklin, the long time Apple software engineer details how he helped create the default text alert sound on the iPhone — a sound otherwise known as 'Tri-tone.' The history of the the pleasant text alert sound that we've all come to know and love stretches all the way back to 1998, nearly 10 years before the iPhone ever hit store shelves." Here's Jacklin's post.
Attention to detail (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Hardly Iconic (Score:5, Funny)
The Nokia Tune predates polyphonic ringtones. You've not really heard it unless you've heard it in its original dentist-drill format, in its preferred setting of "important part of movie you've been waiting to see for months" or "close enough to hear, but too far to reach and silence, while you are attempting to fall asleep".
Re:Here's the sound (Score:1, Funny)
So I've just learnt that Tri-tone is:
- never going to give me up
- never going to let me down
- never going to run around
- or desert me.
Re:ass pounder v.1.0 (Score:5, Funny)
how many iphones can you pack in your ass at once without leakage?
I don't think the wombat features highly in the /. demographic:
As you splash along the track
Eyes alert and ears pinned back
You might have seen those queer square turds
And thought, if not expressed in words
The stress of such a defecation
Baffles ones' imagination
But it's not done to entertain us -
The Wombat has an oblong anus.
So if your slumber is disturbed
By cries and screams, don't be perturbed.
Eyes closed, teeth clenched and racked with pain
A Wombat's gone and crapped again!!
HTH