Sonify... your package's journey







305 – Becoming Led Zeppelin (Apr 10, 2025 13:37)
For the film Becoming Led Zeppelin, a documentary about the formative years of the grou...
The Audio Anatomy of The Pitt: Crafting Tension in a Medical Drama – with Bryan Parker (Apr 9, 2025 15:21)
Supervising sound editor Bryan Parker at Formosa Group talks about designing tense, act...
Dune: Awakening – behind the game music: (Apr 9, 2025 15:08)
Go behind the game music for Funcom's upcoming Dune Awakening, in this excellent new vi...
Sonification, and especially data-sonification, is still an underused technique. I’ve been quite interested in sonifications, and have heard both very useful, as well as utterly rubbish applications. I’ve been trying to wrap my head around which sonifications work, and which don’t.
In the “Sonify…” posts, I will post about different ways of sonifying data. This time: Sonfiying Wikipedia. Listen to Wikipedia by Hatnote is a sonification and visualisation of changes being made to Wikipedia. Hatnote is Mahmoud Hashemi and Stephen LaPorte, both interested in “Wiki life”.
“Listen to Wikipedia” sonifies changes from Wikipedia-articles in real time. Bell sounds indicate additions, and string plucks indicate subtractions to an article. Pitch changes according to the size of the edit. It’s worth noting that Wikipedia is maintaned by both bots and humans, and it’s only through these web experiments that we can see or hear that labour force.
What do you think? Is this a good sonification of the data of Wikipedia?