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.
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
Re:ass pounder v.1.0 (Score:4, Interesting)
All I can say is never in a million years did I think I would ever search for "wombat turds." Even more surreal is this video [io9.com]. I'm just astounded. Fuck the iPhone tritone, this is far more interesting....
Attention to detail (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Attention to detail (Score:5, Insightful)
Or in this case the attention to detail of a sound designer creating a sound effect for a different product that Apple would eventually buy out, and reuse the sound from in another completely different product for a completely different purpose.
Kudos to Apple for picking a sound out of all the possible Apple-owned sound effects that sounds appropriately "messagey", especially in comparison to the specially-composed ring- and message-tones it had to compete with, but the nerdly attention to detail belongs to someone else.
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Yes it would be much better if they were properly historicat.
You tempted the fates when you mentioned attention to detail.
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I have a feeling that cellphone companies deliberately changed SOS to something else in order not to cause trouble. Unfortunately the result now is that most people have the wrong idea of what SOS in Morse code sounds like.
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The letter 'O' is represented in Morse code by three dashes, while the letter 'M' is represented by two dashes. Therefore the vibration pattern of . . . - - . . . spells out SMS, not SOS. It's a clever and subtle way to announce text messages, and kudos to the Apple engineer who came up with it.
However some complete moron at Apple mislabeled it "S.O.S." in their list of standard vibration patterns, and it remains mislabeled even today. Thus the hate on Apple for lacking attention to detail.
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The letter 'O' is represented in Morse code by three dashes, while the letter 'M' is represented by two dashes. Therefore the vibration pattern of . . . - - . . . spells out SMS, not SOS. It's a clever and subtle way to announce text messages, and kudos to the Apple engineer who came up with it.
ITYM NOKIA
Re: (Score:2)
Then kudos to Nokia for coming up with it, and shame on Apple for completely screwing it up when they stole it.
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That one almost drove me crazy when I heard it for the first time! (And the owner of the phone wasn't around to stop it from repeating) That sound is WAY TOO CLOSE to
Dit Dit Dit
De De De
Dit Dit Dit
One letter apart (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
But that's unlikely to happen with a familiar language (or dialect)
While I knew the morse code for SOS, I didn't know the code for "M". HEck, it took me a while to find out that it was meant to spell SMS in the first place!
Pop-cultural osmosis failure (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Wow... that was probably the wordiest way to say "Ha, ha! You don't know morse".
But you raise a good point: How many people recognized those beeps as mores anyway?
I must be some kind of outlier (Score:2, Informative)
I can't for the life of me think of what the 'tri-tone' sounds like.
On the other hand, the Nokia tune [wikipedia.org] is possibly more well known than Mickey Mouse.
Re: (Score:2)
yeah, it ain't popular until the birds are singing it.
literally.
anyways, I think that nowadays they should make them all choose a different tone on first bootup, randomly. for rather obvious reasons.
+old nokia sms beeps are sms, literally(in morse).
Re: (Score:2)
I seem to think the default one was just 'M', and the 'special' one was SMS, which was a bit long winded.
Re: (Score:2)
> I can't for the life of me think of what the 'tri-tone' sounds like.
You know what's funny? I remember at one point (Miami, early 2000s) when you couldn't go *anywhere* without hearing it constantly. Then, almost overnight (circa 2005), it just kind of disappeared(*). Oh, for another year or two, you could still hear it occasionally if you were in South Beach, or someplace around lots of visitors from South America or Europe, but I can't even remember the last time I actually heard a phone playing it.
(*
Here's the sound (Score:5, Informative)
is supposed to be. And it doesn't seem to playable at or even linked
to from any of the story links.
So here it is [youtube.com].
Aaaaah, that one.
Re: (Score:2)
Thanks a lot !
Mod Parent Up !
Re: (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: (Score:2, Insightful)
Who leaves the default tones on/leaves clocks blinking/etc?
People who have better things to do with their lives.
But, yes, we're the (screaming, bitching, whining, butthurt) moron.
Re: (Score:2, Flamebait)
Virus database has been updated (Score:2)
Hardly Iconic (Score:1)
Its no Nokia tune thats for sure.
Dah dala da da
(or angry frog for poor quality but memorable)
Re: (Score:3)
IIRC, Thomas Dolby came up with that one. Or at least made the technology to do polyphonic sound on a phone.
Re: (Score:2)
Huh?
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: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:2)
I'm feeling nostalgic for the times when other people's phones that just gave you a dim green glow in your peripheral vision and not a glaring white search light.
MFing snakes (Score:2)
Guess what kind of space the snakes in the Nokia phone game [wikipedia.org] moved around on.
Yes, they were MFing snakes on a MFing plane long before Samuel L. Jackson starred in that meme of a movie.
Re: (Score:2)
There's a great compendium of Snake variants called "snakes on a cartesian plane" that might be relevant to your interests.
Annoying stupid D-bags (Score:2)
You've not really heard it unless you've heard it in its original dentist-drill format
You mean back when the lyrics were "You annoying stupid douchebag, turn your phone off now"?
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Oh he came up with it? Was that before or after Francisco Tarrega wrote in in 1902?
Re: (Score:2)
The Nokia tune is a couple bars from some classical spanish guitar piece, if memory serves.
Thanks, timothy (Score:5, Insightful)
I know that the Slashdot editors get a lot of stick for apparently being asleep at the wheel, but taking the time to add the original source article and not just the blog provided in the original submission is very welcome.
Re: (Score:2)
I know that the Slashdot editors get a lot of stick for apparently being asleep at the wheel, but taking the time to add the original source article and not just the blog provided in the original submission is very welcome.
And not get kickbacks from the bloggers?
Re: (Score:3)
And not get kickbacks from the bloggers?
I don't think they are smart enough to ask for kickbacks. Ooooo, burn. :-)
Ah, the old days when you could check slashdot at 3:00AM and see Cowboy Neal diligently posting new interesting articles...
Easy to Fascinate Tomithy (Score:2, Insightful)
The story of some cute beeps and boops is a pretty low threshold for fascination.
Captcha: Teh Shiny!
Re: (Score:2)
Well a lot of great things in the world are very simple. And making something simple isn't always easy, it may take a lot of skill, and trying.
Know and Love? (Score:1)
It's fucking annoying.
First Thing to Replace (Score:3)
The first thing I did when I got an iPhone 5 was to replace this sound with the much subtler but more recognizable HTC Woodblock sound I've been using for several years. But now I call it Fakeblock for obvious reasons.
Re: (Score:3)
When I eventually figured out what it was I was surprised. It isn't really iconic, any more than the default Windows XP event sound. Generic, mushy, tuneless, forgettable...
For a while I used the JR East announcement sound: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4T9qVpa6coE [youtube.com]
Re: (Score:2)
generilization (Score:1)
Coo (Score:2)
He used Lisp, nice. Granted it was just for analysis and not to generate self-modifying, evolving code.
Re: (Score:2)
which is something a couple of for-loops in any language could accomplish in about five lines
But to use only five lines of code to both get something done AND raise the collective ire of Slashdot? I can only think of a few languages that are capable of this. Ruby comes to mind.
Re: (Score:2)
Every single piece of hardware and software they used is referenced and properly linked to in the source article. I think it's just their inherent nerdiness and/or nostalgia about the tools they were using at the time. Sample paragraph:
At the time (this was mid-1999), my computer was a Mac PowerPC tower (Blue and White PowerMac G3). Although a guitar player, I was dabbling in MIDI, primarily for drums and pads. I was big-time into the various extensions of General MIDI, as I wanted something fairly standard
Re: (Score:2)
Because he is reminiscing about what he used at the time, and many of his readers will find it interesting.
I was particularly interested in his talk of the SW1000XG, and Opcode OMS. He didn't have to include that detail, but I found it all the more interesting because of it. Probably because I used the same technology at the time.
Really? (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Translation:
I'm a Fandroid. Like all other fanbois I'm less concerned with what the end user does with the technology than what flavor of technology they own. Anything that any company ever does that doesn't support my express misguided feelings of loyalty to a certain product will be clunky and antiquated in my eyes. Don't even bother to discuss the virtues of any technology with me because my mind is already made up.
I have to admit, this is the first time I've ever seen someone get so exceedingly butthurt over criticism of a fucking ringtone.
That's not a complement, BTW.
Mods:
Modded up? A chance to actually decide on a technology by its merits and not the company behind it or an Apple fanboi.
Modded down? Just another Fandroid in a Fandroid world.
You missed one: Modded down appropriately, because you're a jackass with fucked-up priorities.
Not really a "tritone" (Score:4, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
I'm guessing the article writer isn't a musician, not knowing that the VIII and the octave mean the same (although I never hear anyone use VIII; it's octave or in notation "8va" because harmonically the I and the VIII are the same).
Re:Not really a "tritone" (Score:4, Informative)
The original quote from Jacklin's blog is:
I wanted a happy feel, so notes from the major scale, focussing on I, III, IV, V, and VIII (the octave).
But yes, it's clear that to the article writer 'octave' was simply a buzzword, and he didn't grasp the significance of the roman numerals. So he assumed that those numerals were different sorts of 'octaves'.
Re: (Score:1)
Not to be confused (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:1)
Comment removed (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Or maybe cause you're not sure you'll feel your phone go off and you don't give enough of a crap about it to change it from the default?
Re: (Score:2)
Not until iOS 6 (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Set the clock back 48 years, and watch the first minute of the very first episode of Get Smart. [youtube.com] It's almost like Mel Brooks could see the future.
If you want attention ... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Or a Remington 12 gauge pump action. With all the movies that use it, that sound has almost become hardwired into our brains to call attention to danger.
Of course, all I can think about then is getting a phone call during a traffic stop and reaching into your pocket to silence the ringer. "Honestly, officer, it's my ring tone!"
royalties (Score:2)
Pleasant (Score:1)
Route Nagios notifications to your phone and you will never describe your text message notification sound with an adjective "pleasant" :)