Vibrating alert

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

A vibrating alert is on communications devices to notify the user of an incoming connection. They are particularly common on mobile phones and pagers and are usually used to supplement the ring tone.

Two primary uses of the vibrating alert are when a person cannot hear the ring tone (a noisy environment or through hearing loss) or when they want a more discreet notification. However when the device is placed on a hard surface it can often be as loud or louder than a ringtone.

Most phones are nowadays fitted with a vibrating alert, one of the exceptions being the Nokia 9500: due to the large size of this phone a larger motor would be required to make the phone vibrate. The phone itself would absorb too much of the vibration and therefore the motor required to make it vibrate was too big and could damage the phone.

Vibrating alert motor
Vibrating alert motor

The vibrating alert is produced by a small electric motor connected to an eccentric (unbalanced) weight.

Vibrating alerts can be used as an engineering tool for detecting fault in comlex dynamic systems.

The song Vibrate, on the 2003 Want One album by Rufus Wainwright, is centred around vibrating alerts, including the repeated line "My phone's on vibrate for you".

See also: Phantom mobile device vibration

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