BWONG BWONG BWONG rrrrrrrrrrrrr EEEEEEEEEEEEE kCHHHHHHHHHH eReReReReR
Comment on I can still hear every sound including the error at the end...
perishthethought@lemm.ee 2 years ago
I’m old but I don’t know what the “bwong bwong bwong” is. Anyone?
thorbot@lemmy.world 2 years ago
NOPper@lemmy.world 2 years ago
Are you old enough to have had dialup?
agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works 2 years ago
I am and I’m drawing a blank. I remember kchshchshchchchchch eeeeeedle eeedllllllllle, then some croaking and various phone sounds, no bwongs though.
perishthethought@lemm.ee 2 years ago
I’m am and same here. Maybe I’m so old I’ve forgotten?
I don’t hear it in these examples, for instance.
agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works 2 years ago
V.34 is the one burned into my memory. I hear plenty of BIPs but nothing I would consider a BWOP
pedz@lemmy.ca 2 years ago
It’s a specific 56K protocol. There were a few different types of 56K modems and they did the last part of the handshake differently. One did the “boing boing” and another common one had more of an ascending tone at the end of the handshake.
You can hear the boing boing one at the end (1m54s) of that example www.youtube.com/watch?v=xalTFH5ht-k
ramble81@lemm.ee 2 years ago
I believe that part was doing a sound quality test to ensure the data rate could be reached. If the line quality was bad it would connect at a slower rate since it was based on frequency.
FrenLivesMatter@lemmy.today 2 years ago
Yup, and whether the modem on the other side was able to reach the same data rate as well.