Comment by asutekku

5 years ago

So the whining heard with dial-up modems was the sound of an actual data, huh. Never really thought about it, but super cool!

Very similar to the sound of the Commodore data tapes when inserted to a regular cassette player. Tried it as a kid, I was convinced I broke something.

Random example: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wVsY9PVIKsQ

  • Dual cassete players were great for copying programs/games!

    Also reminds me of Amiga's Video Backup System which made use of Amiga's video processing capabilities to output data and read from VHS tapes. That was a slow process but could store large amounts of data, and you just needed a VCR.

    • > That was a slow process but could store large amounts of data...

      I’d note that as then-large amounts of data.

      “520MB will fit on a 4-hour tape!”

      Danmere Backer was similar for PCs, with custom hardware; they got up to 4 GB a tape.

      1 reply →

That was your modem negotiating the protocol and speed with the remote modem, not proper data. Still, if your mother happened to use the phone line while you were connected, she would heard the actual data on the line, just before the connection broke. Oh, the times.

  • Best feature of BBS software (WWIV, Telegard, etc.) - the "fake line noise" button, which feigned data corruption as if someone picked up the phone. It displayed garbage characters to the logged in user, and then you could disconnect them.

modem = MOdulator + DEModulator

Dial-up modems used the public switched telephone network to transmit data via audio signals through regular phone calls. The modems had an internal speaker so the operator could “debug” the connection with their ears, e.g. if they called the wrong number and an actual person was talking on the other end.