A short signal for text message arrival. It's a monophonic, square wave synthesis. Made to sound like old times, when cellphones didn't play mp3 files. Synthesised with zynaddsubfx inside lmms, edited and normalized in audacity.
Four hits of a vibrophone in rapid succession. Used originally on the solar postal services podcast as a text alert. Made with musescore3. The letter 'h' in morse code.
Me saying "you have a new message". It can be used for either email or message notification. I used the built-in microphone of a toshiba laptop to record this.
Formatted for use in the make noise morphagene. This reel was used in the morphagene: plane of composition video. It consists of several splices of equal length to be traversed through linearly or nonlinearly. Audio is counting from 1 through 8 with various text-to-speech voices. The output has been edited so that the numbers appear at the same time in each splice for plane of composition traversal.
I was given a text to speech program to play with and this is what i came up with using audacity and some sound clips/fx from the library. All sounds are free to use combined on open source software. Short ditty 1 minute.
Introduction to the freesound apiv2 documentation, converted to audio using aws polly text to speech service. Voice synth is set to 'emma', output format to 'mp3'.
Received this robo-call today on my home phone -- it is both fascinating and terrifying to me, and felt like it needed to be out in the wild. So here you go world. . .
A live recording dialing a number using the telephone system in canada, which can be very frustrating since they often give you incorrect error messages. Microphone: iphone 3g.
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.
This is the announcement made inside a sanisette (a self-cleaning, high-tech street toilet found throughout paris) when the door opens after pressing the button to go in. The mechanical noises are unavoidable because the announcement is triggered by the opening of the door. Recorded with zoom h4n built-in mics / 94 khz / 24-bit stereo.
Female voice from a ticket fee payment booth in a parking garage saying "please insert your parking ticket" in fort collins, colorado. Recorded on 2015-01-31 13-51-40 with a smartphone.