This is just a basic beep from a phone. I guess i figured freesound didn't have enough beeps, so i uploaded this. I believe it is in c#, but there is a possibility i am mistaken.
Sound of cell phone vibrator. Sound recorded with a zoom h4n pro. Son d’un vibreur de téléphone portable. Son enregistré avec un zoom h4n pro. My sounds are licensed under the creative commons 0 license but it would be a pleasure for me to hear your work so doesn’t hesitate to comment or to send me a message with your work :).
A short recording of me typing on my phone. A couple of breath sounds interrupt so apologies for that but hopefully a helpful little recording!. Recorded over laptop mic. Sound of a samsung s8 keyboard.
I recorded this many years ago on an imac g3 in 2008, the sound was recorded using the imac headphone jack into my desktop pc at the times audio in. I ended up doing this as my dsl went down for several days and i managed to get netzero working. I then uploaded the video to youtube where it has received over 10 million views. Https://www. Youtube. Com/watch?v=gsnar6fruo0. In 2012 a wonderful poster was made by oona räisänen, if you want a technical breakdown of what's going on in my audio have a read. Http://www. Windytan. Com/2012/11/the-sound-of-dialup-pictured. Html.
Sony ericsson w300i receiving a call in 'vibrate' mode. First against a soft surface, and then held in hand. Recorded with apex410 wide diaphragm condenser mic through mbox2.
This sound have been recorded in mono, on a samsung s8, using the recording app ''audiorec''. I have used izotope rx 6 to remove any unwanted noise. *this sound is completely free to use without any need of giving credits(if desired). *.
Phone-ringing from a distance, a baby crying somewhere, teenagers laughing, birds chirping, old chinese music playing from a radio, seniors playing chinese chess.
I created a dtmf tone with an amplitude of 0. 8 and a tone/silence ratio of 550 and during 7s. Then i amplified 1. 3 db sound. And finally i multiplied the speed of 0,960.
A simple ringtone from star trek: into darkness created with after effects. It was simply a sine wave produced in adobe after effects, edited with a few volume adjustments.
Standard messages when calling in to voicemail. File includes starting the call, deleting several messages, and the end of the call; no actual voicemail messages.
I used audacity with an internal mic to record this. Its good quality though. i just dialed some numbers on my house phone with the dialtone at the beginning. Its very clear there might be some background noise though.