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  2. Background noise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Background_noise

    Background noise is an important concept in setting noise levels. Background noises include environmental noises such as water waves, traffic noise, alarms, extraneous speech, bioacoustic noise from animals, and electrical noise from devices such as refrigerators, air conditioning, power supplies, and motors. The prevention or reduction of ...

  3. Kaleidoscope (software) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kaleidoscope_(Software)

    Kaleidoscope is a third party theme manager for System 7 and Mac OS 8, written by Arlo Rose and Greg Landweber.It utilizes a proprietary framework to apply "schemes" to the Macintosh GUI, long before Apple released the Appearance Manager system with Mac OS 8 (later updated in Mac OS 8.5, providing similar functionality using "themes").

  4. Sound masking - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sound_masking

    Sound masking is the inclusion of generated sound (commonly, though inaccurately, referred to as "white noise" or "pink noise") into an environment to mask unwanted sound. It relies on auditory masking. Sound masking is not a form of active noise control (noise cancellation technique); however, it can reduce or eliminate the perception of sound ...

  5. Comfort noise - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comfort_noise

    the speech may sound "choppy" (see noise gate) and difficult to understand; the sudden change in sound level can be jarring to the listener. To counteract these effects, comfort noise is added, usually on the receiving end in wireless or VoIP systems, to fill in the silent portions of transmissions with artificial noise.

  6. Noise pollution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Noise_pollution

    The L90 is the sound level that exceeds 90% of the time period; this is commonly referred to as background noise. [12] Researchers with the US National Park Service found that human activity doubles the background-noise levels in 63 percent of protected spaces like national parks, and increases them tenfold in 21 percent.

  7. The Hum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Hum

    A 1973 report cites a university study of fifty cases of people complaining about a "low throbbing background noise" that others were unable to hear. The sound, always peaking between 30 and 40 Hz (hertz), was found to only be heard during cool weather with a light breeze, and often early in the morning. These noises were often confined to a 10 ...