Make Your Own Ringtone (Digital Storytelling Assignment)

Here is my second digital storytelling assignment for ds106. This time I picked up the one in the audio category and made an annoying ringtone that forces you to answer the phone. It took me for a while to make it, but it was fun editing the sounds. I hope the listener also enjoy listening to it.

Annoying ringtone by Shinichiro

All the sounds used in the file are from freesound.org:

phoneringring.mp3       
phone.wav       
cellfone_dexter.wav        
cellfone_ring.wav       
telephonering.wav       
Bell System Ringer Model 687A (8-70).wav       
Old Telephone Ring.wav       
old telephone bell.wav        
ringUK1965.wav       
BelgiqueBellPhone.mp3       
phone-1952-bakelite-2-looped.mp3       
we500-loud-3rings.wav       
hello.mp3       
Female Hello.wav       
phonewalkhello.wav       
sound-hello4.mp3       
hello_darling.wav       
You Have a Phone Call.mp3        
PhoneCall2.mp3       
Wassa Matter Homey.mp3       
Anybody here.mp3

Edited by Audacity

Uploaded to Sound Cloud

For more details and other students’ works: Make Your Own Ringtone(s)

Audio III — Ringtone

I decided to do the assignment that I submitted.  Feeling nostalgic, I decided to make my ringtone after the old 56K dial-up sequence.  Cue “More” tag…

Link to sound file:  http://soundcloud.com/gojoego/dial-it-up

Feeling curious, I poked around in the Generate menu option of Audacity, creating the dialing sound that most of us are probably familiar with. The dialing sequence was made with the DTMF Tone under the Generate menu in Audacity.  I had to delete the last dial sound to make it 7 digits, but that’s a trivial operation.  I also tried to create a dial tone on my own, but after exposing myself to a 440 Hz tone for several seconds, I gave up on that and looked one up on freesound.org, which is also where I found the modem sequence.  I had to make the dial tone louder with Effects -> Anplify.  I also found that the dial tone was too short, so I highlighted a segment and used Effects -> Repeat to do 1x repeats until I got a good length, doing the same thing for the silence between the last digit and the modem noise.  Part of the modem sequence was shortened to make my file exactly 30 seconds, but that’s okay.

At the last minute, I decided to extract the two parts of elveto’s telephone.WAV file that represented pickingup and putting down a phone reciever, adding them to the beginning and end of my sound, respectively.  It just “felt” right, since a modem is very much a type of phone.

I will be trying out this ringtone.  It’s something I’ve never heard on anyone’s phone before, and it’s annoying enough to get my attention :)

Sounds obtained from freesound.org

dialup.wav – File added by lintphishx on Jan 3, 2009

Phone.wav – File added by DJ Chronos on Jul 8, 2006

telephone.WAV – File added by elveto on Jan 13, 2010