

The startup chime (and other system sounds within XP) are based on live orchestral recordings.Ĭomposer Bill Brown worked with Emmy-award winning sound designer Tom Ozanich to create the audio. The consumer-aimed “Millennium Edition” shared the same audio.
Windows xp sounds professional#
Microsoft tinkled the ivories with its professional “2000” operating system.
Windows xp sounds windows#
Microsoft audio producer Ken Kato is credited with the creation of the Windows 98 sound. Legend has it that the shutdown sound played the startup sound backwards. In 1996, Windows NT 4.0 revealed a fresh, futuristic sound. The resulting seven seconds - about twice as long as Microsoft’s initial brief requested - has made tech history as a recognizable “sonic logo.” In 1994 Microsoft asked Brian Eno to create a piece of music that was (in his words) “inspiring, universal, blah- blah, da-da-da, optimistic, futuristic, sentimental emotional.” This prompted Microsoft to create a more aurally pleasing version for its next operating system. 🙂īack in 1992, 3.1’s startup sound was jarring and unpopular. If find this works better for people who have limited time and want to see things “at a glance”. I felt it would be great to take the same content but morph it into a single video (which I have done, see below) and I pasted all of their text for each one so you can read it all in a single glance. They presented all of these sounds in a video slide show of sorts, but you needed to click individually on each page. Check out the video at the end of the post, that’s the best part. Recently I read a great nostalgic post on mashable about this exact topic.
