What did dialup sound like?
What did dialup sound like?
Okay you got me, the clickbait topic isn't as easy to answer as I make it out to be. We all remember what the dialup handshake sounded like, about 30 seconds of pure nostalga. But what I'm wondering is what that data connection sounded like once the speaker went mute after the handshake was finished. I've done plenty of Googling and I'm struggling to find an answer. I remember picking up the landline once as a kid, just to SEE what it sounded like during a transfer, but I was too young to remember, I just remember it stopping almost instantly. Many early-mid 2000s landlines had a mute switch that lets you listen in without the microphone, I continue to wonder to this day if that'd let me listen in on what actual data coming through a dialup connection would sound like. If anyone has any idea or has better Google skills than I do, let me know
It sounds similar to the racket you get when you accidentally call a fax number. This is a recording of an actual dial up internet connection.
It felt like a high-pitched screeching with constant interference. Back then, dial-up connections were slow and unreliable, making the experience frustrating. If you were home as a child, the sound was often a loud, urgent "GET OFF THE INTERNET, I NEED TO USE THE PHONE!!!"
She got tired of me adding AOL disks to the grocery list and asked about dial-up. Back then, dial-up was affordable—around 10 dollars a month for 500 hours or 15 for unlimited. We upgraded later to ADSL when we got a PC running Windows XP. Our local provider (Persona, now Eastlink) would disconnect quickly if they sensed interference, and we used wired phones. A mute button on the phone helped, but it’s been over 15 years now. It was when I was eight years old.