Yesterday I tried to change my ringtone. I'm using an sd-card on wich I have saved some mp3's to use as my ringtone or notification sounds. But I don't seem to be able to select those as my ringtone anymore.

I'm writing an app that sometime fires reminders that are supposed to play ringtones. I can start the ringtone OK, but can't stop it.I have a dismiss method in my fragment that should stop the currently playing ringtone and close the activity, but it doesn't work right.Here's what it does:


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I found that it is only possible to stop a ringtone using RingtoneManager.stopPreviousRingtone() only if the Ringtone was created by the same RingtoneManager instance. An easy way to confirm this is to create an activity with a RingtoneManager and three buttons:

On Android, I'm having a problem trying to figure out which ringtone is actually playing (I'm not trying to detect the default ringtone, but the one actually playing as it may be different due to user setting a particular ringtone for a particular contact).

Hello everyone! I recently changed a work phone from Android to iOS and has saved the ringtones from the Android on my PC. They appear to be mp3 files, when I drag them to Itunes naturally they appear only in the music tab. How can I get these rintones to work on my Iphone? I tried the convert AAC route but when I go to file and convert the AAC option is grey. Any help would be greatly appreciated! Would appreciate specific instruction is possible, not too tech savvy anymore lol.

Hi! Thank you for your reply, unfortunately neither one helped my issue. I have a folder with ringtones under mp3 format which iOS does not recognize as a tone, only .mr4. I just need a way to convert the mp3 format to mr4 so I can use them as ringtones in iOS.

What I end up doing EVERY SINGLE TIME I have to add this ringtone file (I wipe my device occasionally) is finding the "Media Storage" app on my device and clearing its memory. At this point the phone thinks there are no ringtones, but then once I reboot, all the old ringtones are there along with my ringtone which has been in the same location the ENTIRE TIME.

I have to be missing something simple because all the internet forums I am reading are all straightforward "just put the file in the ringtones folder and it works like magic" which is very frustrating.

Lastly if the above are no go or already sorted correctly, goto settings-->apps and locate media storage. Force stop it, clear it's cache and then reboot. Note if you want to clear all it's data, pull your ringtones to a different directory first JIC then after your clear all data , move them back to your ringtones directory. If you are rooted just copy the file over to the correct place in /system/media/ and set perms correctly [644] and reboot.

I have a setting on my phone. settings - audio profiles - individual profile setting - custom ringtone. here I can add any MP3 to the list of phone recognised ringtones. if you have such, then you're golden.

I came across the same problem. My new Moto E (2nd gen) would not play the ringtones I copied from my computer to my phone. I solved this problem by ignoring the message that I get from my Moto E about converting the files over to WMA files (I left them as .m4A files - music files) when I copy them from my computer to my phone and copied them back into the ringtones folder as well as the music folder. I opened Google Music player and played them and then assigned them to my alarms. What a pain in the neck! It is fixed now.

I'm sorry this is so long, but if you're still desperate it might help. I've unsuccessfully been through a lot of online advice. I have a generic phone running 'N' (that's Nougat, right?), a Blu Vivo XL2, which has two SIM slots. I'm only using one of the latter at present, and for some reason the guy at the store put the SIM card in slot 2. I took T L Kannan's advice to give the ringtone file a title in addition to its name (by going back to Audacity and not skipping the Metadata part of Export audio and of course placing this version in the phone's Ringtones folder), which may or may not have helped. Real resolution came from a bizarre experience I hadn't heard of before.

But wait! Testing the new tone by adjusting the Ring volume slider still plays the default ringtone! Apparently this is tied to the (in my case, empty) SIM 1 slot, because repeating all of the above nonsense allowed me to attach yet another, differently-named copy of my ringtone to SIM 1, with the result that the volume slider finally plays (the equivalent of) my new ringtone!

I put 100 new ringtones onto my SD card but they wouldn't show up when I tried to select them. So, I played a single MP3 ringtone in my music player, then all 100 new ringtones suddenly appeared in my 'select phone ringtone' in settings/sound

Every device nowadays comes with incredible customization options. This includes aesthetic customization with cases and straps and internal personalization with custom wallpapers and ringtones. Stock ringtones pre-installed on your new Android smartphone sound good enough. That said, they cannot make the phone sound unique to you.

Is there a song that's an inside joke between you and a friend? Or maybe a love song that you share with your partner? If you want, choose those songs as custom ringtones for a specific contact. It's a nice way to personalize the ringtones for people you know well.

You can transfer audio files from your computer to your phone to use them as ringtones. One way of doing this is through a wired connection. By connecting your devices using a USB cable, for example, you can copy the audio file from your computer to your phone's local storage.

Phone ringtone customization is a lost art. Hearing your favorite song now and then can be a pleasant surprise. Using certain songs for certain people can be fun, too. It's a sure way to start every phone call on a positive note. If you have trouble with call quality or spotty reception, look into how to make calls using Wi-Fi. Smartphones do a lot of the heavy lifting for modern communication. It's worth taking some time to improve your experience.

You can put all of the contacts in your list into a group and assign the group with a ringtone, and set the default ringtone as something else. This way anyone not stored in your phone will ring with a different tone to anyone you have stored.

As far as I know no, they're restricted number but they're still treated as different numbers. I doubt that the phone would be able to set a ringtone due to it not being a contact and it needs to know the number to be able to know what ringtone to play otherwise it will play the default ringtone. As it doesn't know the restricted calls number it'll play the default ringtone.

Johndroid. Thank you, thank you, thank you. Right now I was looking for an answer to set a ringtone to private numbers (that's what appears in my cell phone when somebody calls and doesn't show the tel. number) in Google.com and then I saw this Spiceworks.com web site and I decided to check if there was an answer waiting for me and I read your suggestion and Voila! Your suggetion was the best thing I could do for my cell phone. Now If that private number phone calls appears again even if I see it, at least no gonna bother my ears X-D

Anyone find a way to set up a separate ringtone when the Arlo doorbell triggers a call on an Android phone? It only plays the default ringtone and I can't find a way to have a separate ringtone for the doorbell vs. normal calls. My dog has associated the ringtone with people at the door so everytime I get a call he starts barking...

That will change the notification when motion is sensed, however, it does not change the ringtone for the call my phone receives as a result of someone pressing the doorbell. Unless I missed something. Appreciate the time in responding though.

I am using Zoiper for Android on Lenovo 7000 phone. For some reason I cannot turn on ring tone for incoming calls. I went into SIP account - Ringtone and set up a ringtone and it still does not ring. In Audio menu I was only able to turn on vibration for incoming calls. How can I turn on ringtone for incoming calls?

Hey buddy

Make sure your device is not in silent mode, Try cleaning cache files and resetting android app. if still doesn't help. try updating android os and search for zoiper update. Hope my comment adds value herre and resolves your query. Cheers

Need help customising your ringtone for WhatsApp on your Samsung Phone but not too sure where to start? Simply follow the below guide for step-by-step instructions. If you would like to learn how to customise your Notifications or Ringtone please check out our guide How to set a music file as a Notification Tone on my Samsung Phone for further support.

The default ringtone that comes with your Android phone isn't always going to feel like it's right for you. You might find it annoying, too similar to another sound, or just want something that's a better fit for who you are.

I am trying to set an alarm overnight based on if it is a workday or not. I have this working but am struggling to set a ringtone for the alarm, anything I do just ends up with the default tone. Does anyone know how I can use android.intent.extra.alarm.RINGTONE to set the ringtone to a specific file?

And a legal warning: You can find many tutorials online on how to turn your iTunes music into a ringtone. It surely can be done. But as unfair as it seems, it might not be legal. Because of copyright laws, even if you already own a song, you must buy it again to turn it into a ringtone, according to an answer on an Apple-controlled message board.

Ringtones on Android smartphones are music files, just like the ones that make up your music collection. Realising this, I wondered how these files were tagged, if at all. Here's how my original list of ringtones appear (on my ancient HTC Wildfire). ff782bc1db

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