Remember dialing up the internet?

GP44

Member
Anybody remember those sounds that you heard over the telephone when you dialed up the internet for the old pedestal computer?
I wasn’t sure if the phone was going to explode or if the devil was going to appear!
LOL!!
You can hear those sounds agin by searching for “ Dial up internet sounds.”
 

A dial-up modem’s sound was a jumble of tones and static that almost felt alive, like two machines struggling to understand each other.

It would begin with a click and a hiss, as if a phone line had just woken up. Then came a long, steady carrier tone ... a flat, high beep that held steady for a second or two. Quickly, that tone would be broken up by bursts of sharp chirps, squeals, and warbling trills, rising and falling in pitch like an electronic birdcall. Some parts had a grinding, metallic quality, almost like electronic gears slipping against each other.

As the sequence went on, the sounds would shift back and forth between high-pitched screeches and lower, buzzing growls, with bursts of static layered over it, until finally the cacophony would settle into a faint, steady hiss ... the line’s way of saying the connection was established.

It was chaotic, shrill, and strangely rhythmic. A sound anyone who lived through it can recognize instantly, even decades later.

Click… hissss…
Bweeeeeeeeee—
Krrrrrr-krrrrrrrk!
Chee-chee-chee-eeeeeeeee!
Shhhhhhht-kreeeeeee-oooooo-ink!
Bwee-bwoo-bwoo-bwoo-eeeeeeeee!
Kkshhhhhh-tkshhhhhh…
…hisssssss… (connection achieved).

EDIT: Trying to remember ... think I used dial-up from 1996 (first personal computer) until about 2006 ... 10yrs maybe ... I think.
 

Last edited:
Anybody remember those sounds that you heard over the telephone when you dialed up the internet for the old pedestal computer?
I wasn’t sure if the phone was going to explode or if the devil was going to appear!
LOL!!
You can hear those sounds agin by searching for “ Dial up internet sounds.”
I remember using a GE Tymeshare with a teleprinter and programs I generated on punched paper tape.
 
Yep,
A dial-up modem’s sound was a jumble of tones and static that almost felt alive, like two machines struggling to understand each other.

It would begin with a click and a hiss, as if a phone line had just woken up. Then came a long, steady carrier tone ... a flat, high beep that held steady for a second or two. Quickly, that tone would be broken up by bursts of sharp chirps, squeals, and warbling trills, rising and falling in pitch like an electronic birdcall. Some parts had a grinding, metallic quality, almost like electronic gears slipping against each other.

As the sequence went on, the sounds would shift back and forth between high-pitched screeches and lower, buzzing growls, with bursts of static layered over it, until finally the cacophony would settle into a faint, steady hiss ... the line’s way of saying the connection was established.

It was chaotic, shrill, and strangely rhythmic. A sound anyone who lived through it can recognize instantly, even decades later.

Click… hissss…
Bweeeeeeeeee—
Krrrrrr-krrrrrrrk!
Chee-chee-chee-eeeeeeeee!
Shhhhhhht-kreeeeeee-oooooo-ink!
Bwee-bwoo-bwoo-bwoo-eeeeeeeee!
Kkshhhhhh-tkshhhhhh…
…hisssssss… (connection achieved).

EDIT: Trying to remember ... think I used dial-up from 1996 (first personal computer) until about 2006 ... 10yrs maybe ... I think.
I was just learning at that stage , we had dial up ….the computer sounded like it was in agony :ROFLMAO: @Naturally

My hubs had been using computers for a while , but I’d just bought my first computerised / embroidery sewing machine ( that was 1997) I had to operate programs on the computer to put designs on a reader / writer card like thing and insert it in the machine , to sew the designs ~ so with hubs heap I wrote all the instructions down on Index cards.
 
Appeal for a cheering up? : r/CasualUK
 


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