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Noises at night can disturb sleep.âIf you canât stop these noises, then you could try âmaskingâ them by generating white noise.
However, if you attend a conference and find your accommodation is noisy, you might not have brought any device that can generate a continuous stream of white noise.
This MIDI file can be played on some older mobile phones as a âringtoneâ (if the phone supports MIDI ringtones, e.g. Windows Mobile 6, *not* Android or iOS).âIts size is less than 2 kB but it still gives 1 hour of continuous noise (which usually works better than setting a shorter file to repeat).
May sound bad on some devices.âIt *should* sound like this (but much longer).
It is not *true* white noise because most phone-based synthesizers canât do that.âInstead, I tell your phoneâs tone generator to play an impossibly low violin chord containing all 12 pitches of the chromatic scale.âOn *some* synthesizers, this results in a mingling of harmonics that approximates white noise.âBut on other synthesizers you just get a cacophonous rumble.âYour mileage may vary.
If the âwhite noiseâ MIDI file does not work on your equipment, you could try this white noise AMR file instead (2.3Â M download for 1Â hour of noise).âItâs still smaller than MP3s etc, although not nearly as small as the MIDI file.
You might also be interested in this 52-byte silence.mid to set as a ring-tone for persistent sales departments etc.âIt actually has two extremely soft notes with silence in between, as some players are âconfusedâ by anything less, but youâre unlikely to hear it.âIf you need an MP3, try this silence.mp3 (1 second, 1.9k).
Here is a Python script to generate MIDI ringtones (for older, MIDI-capable phones, *not* modern Android or iOS); the ringtones generated are:
The script can of course be customised.
Note that Apple phones are not capable of playing these MIDI files as ringtones: even after converting to m4r (which typically uses 50 or 100 times the storage space), the phoneâs length limit will be too short for the extended reduced-volume section, and the process of loading the file onto the phone requires additional proprietary software and setup.âMany Android phones are not much better in this instance: they dropped support for MIDI ringtones and donât always support long ringtones.
Download: ringtone.py (requires Python to run)
All material © Silas S. Brown unless otherwise stated. Android is a trademark of Google LLC. Apple is a trademark of Apple Inc. MP3 is a trademark that was registered in Europe to Hypermedia GmbH Webcasting but I was unable to confirm its current holder. Python is a trademark of the Python Software Foundation. Windows is a registered trademark of Microsoft Corp. Any other trademarks I mentioned without realising are trademarks of their respective holders.