It has been suggested that this article or section be merged with
ring (telephone),
ringing signal and
polyphonic ringtone (Discuss)
A ring tone is the sound made by a telephone to indicate an incoming call. The term, however, is most often used to refer to the customisable sounds available on mobile phones. This facility was originally provided so that people would be able to determine when their phone was ringing when in the company of other mobile phone owners.
A phone only rings when a special "ringing signal" is sent to it. For regular telephones, the ringing signal is a 90-volt 20-hertz AC wave generated by the switch to which the telephone is connected. For mobile phones, the ringing signal is a specific radio-frequency signal.
On August 5, 2006, the BBC reported that "Free ringtones" was the eighth most likely search term to return links to malware.[1]
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Contents
- 1 Features
- 2 Criticism
- 3 See also
- 4 References
- 5 External links
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Features
Whereas older telephones simply used a pair of bells for the ringer, modern ringtones have become extremely diverse, leading to phone personalization and customization.
Newer mobile phones allow the users to associate different ringtones for different phonebook entries. Many also allow users to create their own music tones, either with a "melody composer" or a sample/loop arranger (such as the MusicDJ in many Sony Ericsson phones). Often these are native formats only available to one particular phone model or brand. However, other formats, such as MIDI or MP3, are often supported; they must be downloaded to the phone before they can be used as a normal ringtone. Commercial ringtones take advantage of this functionality, which has led to the success of the mobile music industry.
An alternative to a ring tone for mobile phones is a vibrating alert. It may be useful:
- In noisy environments
- In places where ring tone noise would be disturbing
- For the hearing impaired
Criticism
Ring tone advertising campaigns have become hugely popular, though they have also attracted a great deal of criticism. For example, in May 2005 Jamster! bought 73,716 spots across all TV channels for the Crazy Frog advertisements, which were shown so often that many came to find Crazy Frog very irritating.[2]. It should be noted that Southern Rapper Chamillionaire was the first to have a ringtone go 3x Platinum for the hit single "Ridin". He now has his own category on certain phones.
See also
- Ringback tone
- SMAF
- Polyphonic ringtone
- Teen Buzz
References
- ^ BBC News: Warning on search engine safety
- ^ Brand Republic: Crazy Frog named most irritating ad of the year
External links
- Birds learning to mimic mobile phone ringtones
- Ring tones and the music industry
- Sample ringtone - Loud vintage telephone ring
- A Ring Tone Meant to Fall on Deaf Ears NYTimes article on high-pitched ring tones meant to evade detection by adults.
Telephony signals
Dial | Ringing / Ringback | Busy | Congestion / Reorder | Special information | Off-hook | Ring | DTMF | 2600 Hz
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Categories: Articles to be merged | Telephony signals | Telephony | Mobile phone culture | Mobile phones