Polyphonic Ring Tones: Old-Fashioned?
By Philip Nicosia
In the beginning was the ring (really more
of an electronic trill or beep) -- dull, yet
serviceable, using only one tone track; and
with it came the single-line melody -- not
much of a choice.
Then Nokia invented text messaging,
and Paanen, a Finnish programmer, realised
that you use the same technology to easily
transmit songs to mobile phone handsets.
This led to the development of Harmonium,
the first complex polyphonic sound creator.
Instead of being locked into single tones,
users suddenly could have rings with harmony
and texture.
Still, someone had to programme the sounds;
you couldn't just convert your favourite
songs into Harmonium polyphonic sounds.
Digital content providers picked up Harmonium
quickly and used it to create polyphonic
ringtones, selling them to both phone
users and phone providers. While polyphonic
tones were better than monotones, they
still sounded more like an old video game
than the music they were patterned after.
MP3 Ringtones: The New Wave
Today, ringtone providers are switching
to MP3 ringtones with realistic, near-CD-quality
sound. Also called master tones or true
tones, these are usually bits of a real
song, using your favourite music to alert
you to a call. Voice ringtones, sound
effects, and instrumental or lyrical music
are all available as MP3 ringtones today.
MP3 ringtones today account for two thirds
of new mobile ringtones. The sound is
a snippet of your favourite music with
lyrics and the whole band playing -- much
nicer than the old-fashioned ring or dull
monotone melody. Most mobile phone manufacturers
today include this type of ringtone on
their newest handsets. Even better, you
can program today's phones to play different
tones for different reasons.
If you have more than one life, as most
people do, you can also have multiple
ringtones. The songs you want played when
you're out at a pub are probably different
from the ones you want sounding at work
and with most phones today it's not hard
to switch. You can also assign different
ringtones to different people; your mother
might have a radically different tone
from your boyfriend.
Most cell phones come with some ringtones
pre-installed, but you can find the ones
you really like out on the wireless web.
There are several methods for downloading
ringtones. You can subscribe to a service
that will send them to your phone weekly
for a fee. Or you can download new ringtones
from your favourite band's website. If
you prefer to look at a wider variety
of ringtones, you can download them directly
to your phone from several sources, using
either a scrollable menu or choosing a
numerical code linked to the ringtone
you want. Not all rings are compatible
with all phones, so do try to sample them
first.
If your ringtone sounds awful, it may
not be the ringtone; it may be the phone.
Older phones aren't perfectly compatible
with the newer ringtones, though they'll
probably play them. Imagine the difference
between stereo systems in the 1950s and
today; that's about the difference you're
looking at between a three-year-old phone
and a brand new one, in terms of sound
output. Your mobile phone provider should
be able to tell you what your phone can
handle.
Philip Nicosia is the webmaster of Ringtones.lt,
a site specialising in the different genres
of ringtones, including polyphonic ringtones,
true tones, and mp3 ringtones.
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