Hello. I would like some advice on how to create ringtones from My Music Library. I would like to use iOS but might be willing to try using the Mac if that will work better. I know absolutely nothing about Audio editing and find it very intimidating. Not all of the ringtones I want to make are at the beginning of songs.

I was trying to add a new contact and discovered that the Ringtones option has completely disappeared from editing in Contacts. The old contacts still show their individual ringtones (and the ringtones work when someone calls me) and I can still see the ringtones under "Sounds & Vibrations". But when I tap "edit" in Contacts, Ringtones does not come up.


 I've looked up help videos that mention a sound picker app. My phone doesn't show it (or any way to get to system apps). Please help.


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Okay, I can reach ringtones from there. But I used to be able to access it from the edit menu under the individual contacts and that has disappeared.


 Is that a glitch with my phone, or just some new pointless and inconvenient change Samsung made in their last update?

Thank you for the app suggestion! I was able to at least put the files into the correct folders, but unfortunately, they don't show up in the selection list for either ringtones or notifications. I'm not sure if they need to be specific encoders to work, or if there's still just no way for it to access it on US models.

If I remember correctly, for Holloween they did custome auto responses but not the ringtones.

Any case, go to the eufy community and check with support@eufylife.com to see if they have any plans for Christmas.

this fix you posted only set the ringtone as a default ringtone as in for what ever you have for when your phone rings but it will not be listed in you default list of ringtones. still looking for way to move ringtones from SD card to default list and have them avaible at all times

I'm testing out Zoom phone service, and in the setup process, I'd like to add custom .wav files to the options that users can select from for their ringtone. I uploaded a .wav file via the vvx450's web interface, but once I add the url to the recommended Zoom provisioning server, it gets wiped from the phone. Is there a simple way to create a template that lets me include ringtones for users?

Solved after some digging. 

A user on the Poly forums showed how to format .wav files to work on Poly VVX phones: -SIP-Phones/Polycom-VVX300-and-custom-ringtones/m-p/83002/highligh...

Building the provision template wasn't too hard once I found the corresponding parameter in the Poly UC documentation: -ag-6-0-0/page/r-ucs-ag-sampled-audio-file-parameters.html

After that, it was just a matter of uploading my .wav file to a publicly accessible url, one caveat being that I had to make sure the .wav file name in the url had no special characters, because it messed up the Poly phone. On Zoom's side, the provision template looks like this: 

saf.2 = " "

You see, I thought we had all learned a lesson with the Crazy Frog and ringtones based entirely on repeating single-syllable words, but apparently not. BingTones are now invading public places around the world. In a bid to maintain social order, I come offering some ringtones from Windows 7.

Oh, I almost forgot: I found the "normalize" feature in step 3 to make my new ringtone a lot louder than the default ringtones already on my phone, so unlike what I initially thought, this may be not be suitable for using every time.

I found a ghetto work-around for group ringtones on the iPhone. It's sort of annoying but once you get it set up, its easy to then change a group ringtone. You have to set the ringtone for each one of your contacts, but only ONCE, and then changing the ringtone for a group is easy. You won't want to do this unless you enjoy changing your ringtones every so often.

1. Create a custom ringtone for each group you want to set, and give it a default name that you recognize (ie "AA_Family" "AA_Friends" "AA_Work" etc). I put the "AA_" in front so it shows at the top of my ringtones list on the iPhone.

The iPhone knows that song you are playing regardless of the filename of your ringtone. As long as you don't have conflicts, you'll be alright. Hopefully this isn't too confusing. I tried to be clear without typing out a novel. Again, this is really only helpful if you enjoy changing out your group ringtones often like I do.

Life was strange a decade ago. We still left picture comments, Cameron still wanted us to hug a hoodie rather than price him out of his house before throwing him into a beyond-fucked socio-economic climate, and teenagers still downloaded ringtones. In classrooms up and down the country, teachers fought to be heard over bleepy-renditions of "Is This the Way to Amarillo," Oasis' "The Importance of Being Idle," and "It's Now or Never" by Elvis Presley. The nation's McDonalds' were a hormonally charged dens of iniquity that stunk of chip fat and thrummed to the sound of an 8bit rendition of "Thunder in My Heart" by Leo Sayer. Busses from Aberdeen to Anglesey became cacophonous cabins that tore through the provinces powered by petrol and "Put Your Hands Up for Detroit." Essentially what we were living through was one nation under a (polyphonic) groove. And Jamster were to blame.

But what of Jamster now? Where did their revolution take them? Well, sadly, Jamster never moved on. They're still hawking the same old wallpaper bundles they were always swizzing us with. Back then it was charming, it was the vanguard, it was an explosion of mobile possibility. Back then our phones weren't quite so smart, and they felt fun and freeing and like the future. We're in the future now and the future is a depressing place. We're permanently affixed to our devices, forever attached to emails and dating apps. The future decided that ringtones weren't necessary. No one told Jamster that the future happened.

Someone, somewhere, is sat, brow furrowed, trying to turn Lemonade into a series of sellable ringtones. Forgive them Lord, for they know not what they do. Bluetooth bombed, and wi-fi took its place, and we were suddenly able to steal music in much easier, more fluent ways. The ringtone wasn't needed anymore. Why bother with a paid for approximation when the real thing was there, for free, practically begging to be taken without permission? Revolutions don't always work out. But I'm glad this one happened. Now, I'm off to calculate just how likely my partner is to cheat on me based entirely on our first names.

The mobile carrier will allow its subscribers to download ringtones based on the live performances of the music contest's finalists. For any contestant whose song may not have received publisher clearance that week, Cingular will release a new ringtone of a song performed by that contestant in an earlier round of the show.

Mobile phone ringtones were once just a minor irritant on public transport. Today, they're a lucrative multi-million-pound industry with member companies being investigated by watchdogs over price, sales transparency and marketing to minors who are unaware of the costs. 0852c4b9a8

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