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  2. Red box (phreaking) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_box_(phreaking)

    A red box is a phreaking device that generates tones to simulate inserting coins in pay phones, thus fooling the system into completing free calls. In the United States, a nickel is represented by one tone, a dime by two, and a quarter by a set of five. Any device capable of playing back recorded sounds can potentially be used as a red box.

  3. Ringing tone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ringing_tone

    Ringing tone (audible ringing, also ringback tone) is a signaling tone in telecommunication that is heard by the originator of a telephone call while the destination terminal is alerting the receiving party. The tone is typically a repeated cadence similar to a traditional power ringing signal (ringtone), but is

  4. Ringing (telephony) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ringing_(telephony)

    Ringing is a telecommunication signal that causes a bell or other device to alert a telephone subscriber to an incoming telephone call.Historically, this entailed sending a high-voltage alternating current over the telephone line to a customer station which contained an electromagnetic bell.

  5. Signal tone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Signal_tone

    Certain telephone switching systems used tones, in-band or out-of-band, for signaling on trunks. Typical well-known call progress tones are dial tone, ringing tone, busy tone, and the reorder tone. [1] A loud stutter tone is used to alert subscribers of a handset left off-hook, effectively disabling the circuit for receiving calls.

  6. Call-progress tone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Call-progress_tone

    In many cases, when calling from abroad, busy, reorder and other call failure tones may be played by the local switch. Modern signalling protocols like SS7 send this information digitally; thus only a ringback tone or announcement generated by a distant switch in a foreign network will ever be heard by callers from other countries or networks.

  7. Portal:Telephones/Selected audio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Telephones/Selected...

    A red box is a phreaking device that generates tones to simulate inserting coins in pay phones, thus fooling the system into completing free calls. In the United States, a nickel is represented by one tone, a dime by two, and a quarter by a set of five. Any device capable of playing back recorded sounds can potentially be used as a red box.

  8. Ringtone - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ringtone

    Customers can buy or generate custom ringtones for installation on the device as a default ringtone or a distinctive ringtone used to indicate characteristics of incoming calls. Digital ringtones were a large market in the 2000s, at its peak generating up to $4 billion in worldwide sales in 2004, but the market declined steeply by the end of ...

  9. Ringback - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ringback

    Ringing tone, also ringback tone, the audible ringing that is heard by the calling party after dialing; Ringback number, a number used by phone companies to test whether a telephone line and phone number is working; Automatic ring back, a telephone feature to notify the caller when the called party ceases to be engaged