Sorry to bring back this topic again but I seem to have discovered what synth made this bell sound and it seems to have been not the D50, DX7, M1, or Wavestation but it was actually the D70 which I had not though about. On minute 7:50 of this video you can hear the patch which sounds almost identical and I would say that with a little tweaking you have it, D70 came out in 1990, same year as that song. =3_Rl-Vejiuk

May the sound of this bell penetrated deeply into the cosmos,

 in even the darkest places, living beings hear it clearly,

 so that understanding lights up their hearts and with out hardship,

 they transcend the cycle of birth and death.


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Listening to the bell,

 I feel my afflictions begin to dissolve,

 my mind becomes calm, my body relaxed,

 and a smile is born upon my lips,

 following the sound of the bell, my breath guides me back,

 to the safe island of mindfulness.

 In the garden of my heart, flowers of peace bloom in beauty.

Today, I have updated my Ubuntu 18.04 machine to 20.04. I have noticed that the bell/alert sound has changed. I personally much preferred the old bell sound (used at least in 18.04 and I think also in 16.04) and would like to change it back if possible.

In case an operator fell asleep to the soothing noises of it hammering out text, it had an actual bell it could ring. The character coded 007 in octal, 0x07 in hex, or as \a in a C character or string constant rang the bell when received.

In the C Programming Language (created in 1972), the bell character can be placed in a string or character constant with \a ('a' stands for "alert" or "audible" and was chosen because \b was already used for backspace).

\a is the C representation of the ASCII audible alert ("bell") control character.On an old-school serial terminal, outputting that character produced a "beep" sound. Your terminal emulator may or may not implement this feature.

Your example with the BELL char, as others have pointed out, probably won't work on today's toasters^H^H^H^H^H^H^H^H computers; most terminals redirect the 'bell' character to either be discarded or to flash the terminal briefly.

If your kids are familiar with the parts of the breath (from discussion or the counting breaths exercise above), ask them to notice what part of the breath they are on when the bell rings: in-breath, out-breath, or in-between.

Where does the sound go when it stops?

Is there a difference between hearing and listening?

Do we need a bell to practice mindful listening?

When else in your life could you use mindful listening?

WB: So one funny fact is that the hammer we used on set was actually made out of foam. In post, I remember thumping some melons and cabbage and handing those off, and Sally would have cut them in. If you listen really closely, you can hear a little of the foam hammer from production in the production.

Uniquely suited to audio, Inside Voice is symphonic; complete with interactive games and exercises, and an original score by Chris Bear (Grizzly Bear). You might want to buckle up. This listen is a ride.

I bought these earbuds 10 days ago and I noticed immediately this weird sound issue. The issue is already common for many people and it seems that it affects sometimes the left and sometimes the right earbud. 


In my case, I can hear a ringing or pinging noise coming from my left earbud whenever I'm in a call and someone is speaking, including me. It follows the higher notes of the voice and kinda sounds like an echo but a similar sound to the notification sound you have when you tap on the earbud to either change the NC on or off or to play or pause the music. What I noticed is that the issue can be reproduced also if I snap the left part of the teeth quickly.


If I turn off the NC, then I can't reproduce the issue when snapping my teeth but it still can be reproduced if someone talks in a voice call. Also, I can just listen to a podcast, and no matter if NC is on or off, the pinging is there. It just seems that if NC is off that the issue is less obvious. But again this is in my case, other people have the same issue but reproduce it a bit differently. These are the Reddit posts I found that reference the same issue:



 _faint_pinging_noise_during_voice_calls/

 _anyone_not_having_metal_sound/

 _wf1000xm4_hollow_ringingpinging_in_left_ear/

 _noise_when_listening_to_speech...


Can anyone confirm if this is a design flaw with the hardware or some weird issue with the ANC and microphones that can be resolved with a future update? 





Haymakers for Hope's brand new podcast featuring H4H Co-Founder, Julie Kelly, and Boxing Trainer, Todd Buster Paris. In Season 2 we will hear from past H4H boxers, current boxers as well as one of our trainers - learning more about their Haymakers experience, connection to the cause and what life was like after the final bell. Listen below or wherever you get your podcast so you never miss an episode!

This four-part, bell sound meditation is a short guided practice led by Arthur Zajonc. For our (overdue) weekend exercise, take these ten minutes to try this contemplative meditation. Then, reflect on your experience and share your thoughts with us:

I'd like to try to find a sample (preferably within Logic, or in public domain, or within a reasonably priced library if it comes to that...) of a lone mexican church/chapel bell. You know that real western high noon kind of thing.

I've searched online and have only found big ben and wedding church bell kind of things. I'm sure I'm not the only person who's wanted to use this iconic sound before, so I'm kinda hoping someone on here might have something knocking about somewhere.... i'd be so grateful if you could share it, or point me in the right direction...

You can listen to the recording here (scroll down to the images of the drum). This analysis was conducted at Berkeley Lab earlier this year. The work required help from Engineering Division staff, who developed the gear and belt seen in the image above. This enabled the drum to be rotated at a slow, steady rate so it can be optically scanned.

The public discovered Assa Maga in Russian Dolls, directed by Cdric Klapisch. Her next role as a singer in Bamako, directed by Abderrahmane Sissako, earned her a Csar nomination for Best Newcomer. She is equally recognized as a comedic actress in French comedies which have earned her international acclaim and a large Netflix audience. Building on her international appeal, she has been chosen for lead dramatic roles such as The Boy Who Harnessed the Wind, by Nigerian-English actor and director Chiwetel Ejiofor. Assa Maga stepped behind the camera in 2018, co-directing with Isabelle Simeoni the Canal Plus television hit Regard Noir, a documentary roadmovie. The film deals with the place Black women hold in fiction and the possible solutions for inclusion of all talents. Marcher sur l'eau (Above Water), Assa Maga's first feature-length documentary, examines the issue of drought due to global warming in Western Africa. Marcher sur l'eau was chosen as an official selection at the 2021 Cannes Film Festival, in the category of "Cinema for Climate," and won numerous awards in several film festivals. Her fiction dbut, Noh Feminist, is a short film that premiered at the 2022 Cannes International Film Festival.

How would I make the Nyquist Code for a bell tone? Like the kind on an old fashioned phone, such as the one in this attachment? I wonder if it would be the same as generating a fire alarm tone, like this attachment?

 /uploads/default/original/2X/e/eb37baff889b6b057c2b79119c6dea6f66337f9e.mp3 

 /uploads/default/original/2X/b/b547609af49e4404b36870ae131250e427af204f.WAV

I was just making the point that the jetway bell is almost certainly one single bell and the telephone was intentionally designed to be two. So any code would have to take that into consideration.



Koz

I am willing to pay someone in Sono to produce an app to be able to sound on the hour and on the 1/2 hour of choosing various church Bells that would even stop the music for the on the hour church bell and 1/2 hour bell sound. I would even let sonos rent the app to make some monies . I live in the mountains and work outside and would love to know what time it is by listening to the church Bells.

This seems to be a lot of set up and micromangaging. There must be someone that I can pay and market an app to work inside the sono app that works seamlessly without having to manually restart the playlist and there are times UNSCHEDULED that i dont want my muaic to retart by setting up scheduled times for the music to turn on aftwr the bell sounds. Can you tell me more about the Raspberry Pi Zero that might be the better solution that Stanley reply? Blessings Peter D

Thanks for your comments. Having church bells ring is not for just knowing what time it is but the experience of hearing church bells as thiugh you were in a european village in going back in time. I see that money cannot not always buy you what you want. No one has the vision like i do and seems that technology is limited unless someone with the gifting of programming and the passion to bring church bell.history to a technical world would want to take on a project like this. I will just keep asking my heavenly father to bring someone along side to help me with this project. I am sure if i was the CEO of Sonos that I could easily make this happen!

If you are on campus, we recommend listening to a concert from the Donor Terrace adjacent to McGraw Tower, the Arts Quad, or even attending a concert in-person by climbing the tower's 161 steps. For those of you in more remote locations, the digitized sound will have to do.

In my tradition, we use the temple bells to remind us to come back to the present moment. Every time we hear the bell, we stop talking, stop our thinking, and return to ourselves, breathing in and out, and smiling. Whatever we are doing, we pause for a moment and just enjoy our breathing. Sometimes we also recite this verse: ff782bc1db

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