Every Galaxy phone or tablet comes with default ringtones, although the ones available may differ depending on your carrier. Pick a ringtone that suits you or select a song file you have stored on your device.

If you would like your phone to vibrate when your ringtone sounds, tap Vibrate while ringing from the Ringtone settings screen. From here, select Sync with ringtone, and then tap Back. Tap the switch next to Vibrate while ringing to turn it on.


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I don't know when this issue started because I usually have it on vibrate/silent, but last night I put my phone on normal mode with the ringer set to 100% and yet when someone called me at 3am because they were in a car accident I couldn't hear it. They called me 10 times but my phone barely made a whisper. I can hear the ringtone but it sounds like its at 5% not 100%. It doesn't matter if I set it to 90 or 100, but the ringtone is very quiet.

anyone know what the heck is going on? Why would my phone do that? I've had Android phones since the very first readily available one (the tmobile G1) and the only times I missed an important call was when I stupidly had the phone on silent mode. but this time its the phone that let me down...I didn't have it set on silent. 

Now I have family members upset at me and I can't trust this phone to do something as simple as RING when someone calls you. The most basic function that phones have been able to do since the first cell phone came out and samsung has failed. But hey when I logged into this site the chime that asked if it was me was very loud and clear....so I guess you got something right, just not the basics.

@freeman93: I'm sorry to hear that you have encountered this issue. Please try heading to Settings > Sounds and vibration > Volume, and make sure that the Ringtone slider is at a suitable level. Now, head to the Phone app > Tap the 3 dots in the top right > Settings > Call alert and ringtone > Vibrate while ringing > On. The vibration against a flat surface can be quite loud, and can help to alert you to any incoming calls if you're asleep.

Learn how to change the sound that plays when you get a call, text, email, or other notification on your iPhone or iPad. Choose from a variety of built-in sounds or buy ringtones from the iTunes Store.

Before Android 8, our app was using a background service to play a ringtone using RingtoneManager (starting playback in onStartCommand() and stopping when the service is stopped). This worked pretty well.

I'm a little perplexed by the fact that the simple matter of playing and stopping a ringtone doesn't seem to be dead simple including the background stuff (if I have an app with some kind of calling capability, I just need this to work, so why should I need to mess with this and reinvent the wheel here?).

If you find this method to be a little tricky or if you have a computer nearby, you might want to try out the old school way of making custom ringtones with iTunes and copying them to your iPhone manually.

Did you create a custom ringtone using GarageBand on your iPhone? What do you think about this process? How does this procedure compare to the traditional iTunes method? Do let us know your thoughts and opinions in the comments section down below.

Good day to all, the excellent instructions in this article have FINALLY enabled me to get the desired ringtone on my iPhone 13. I waded through several pimply-faced YouTube time wasters (Gad, those kids need to learn how to use video correctly) before I stumbled on this concise, correct and very useful set of instructions. These were right on the mark and got the job done, first time. Thank you. PK

The purpose of this article is to focus on making ringtones, not about downloading Garageband or addressing unusual error messages about failed app downloads (which could be due to wi-fi, or temporary service disruptions, or other reasons).

If someone calls me when I'm on the phone, they get a ringtone for a couple of seconds, followed by a message "sorry, this number is temporarily unavailable" and there are no beeps on the receiving line as it should to indicate someone is waiting.

Secondly, and much weirder is the fact that when anyone calls me (I've tested this by ringing from a different landline & my mobile) is that the ringtone you get is not the traditional UK ring sound "ring ring ring ring ring ring" but more an American ringtone with one long sound, followed by a 4 second pause & then the long sound etc...

Are you hearing the 'American' ringtone in your home (coming from your phone when it is ringing) when a call comes in. Or do you mean that you hear the American ringtone through the earpiece on the handset you are using to call in to your home phone number? Or both those things?

The ring / engaged tones for a UK to UK call are normally generated by the callers end of the telephone system ( in my case Cisco VOIP kit configured to sound like BT's call progress tones ).


Does that American ringtone occur on just one phone, or does it persist from mobiles as well as other land lines ?




I hope that you get the right result and I agree with your comments on my post. I too would hang up if I thought that I had inadvertently dialled an international number. Please let me know how things work out with second line support.

It's been 2 whole weeks aince I had my last call from Virgin 2nd line support to check if the call waiting & USA ring sound was now fixed (it wasn't) & they said they'll go to the network team to sort it & get back to me (which they still haven't)

I've got zero chance of getting through to the right 2nd/3rd line support person if I called Virgin, so how on earth do I chase this up as it's really starting to annoy me & the people phoning me?

There was a time when ringtones were little extensions of your personality. A little audible signifier to let people know what kind of person you were. Some people were "Sweet Like Chocolate". Some people were Little Britain's Vicki Pollard saying "Yer, but, no, but, shut up I wasn't even doin' nuffin!" A lot of people were Crazy Frog, farting down the highway on his invisible motorbike. Thousands of builders were a woman having a loud orgasm. Nowadays, what with Twitter and Facebook and Instagram and all, there's no need to broadcast these tinny little titbits of your being to the world. Everything else is being broadcast already. You can't fart without it being broadcast on Periscope. Oops! Someone just snapchatted your son's bris. Awks! And so the customised ringtone died, the iPhone moved in with its .WAV sounds of old timey telephones ringing, and its Marimba default, and now we all have to listen to that.

But one woman wasn't happy living like that. One woman was tired of seeing the digital homogenisation spread like a binary disease through our lives. Her name is Mandy Boylett and she's bringing the ringtone back with this, the Vote UKIP ringtone:

Hear that? That's the sound of this country's return to form. That's the sound of the UK going back to its roots, and it turns out those roots sound like the coin-operated kiddies' rides at the end of Southend pier. It's a simple, unflashy message; we don't need to blurt out everything that comes into our heads, just maintain our core values and leave the complicated philosophy to the Europeans.

While I'm sure Mandy's intentions are pure, it's not difficult to see that this ringtone could cause a few problems. For example, if anyone heard it on a crowded bus, and the bus was crowded with people who aren't racists, you may find yourself being stuffed head-first through those tiny top windows. If you were meeting your girlfriend's particularly liberal parents for the first time, and they heard Mandy Boylett's voice emerging from the pocket of your Levi's, they may deign to re-padlock her chastity belt.

 Thanks Lady, I tried calling verizon and they told me to google over to the internet and look for loud ringtones, none of them were adequate and they werent really that loud, maybe I will try emailing them .

I have a program called audacity. It came with a usb phono to digital converter. I can open any mp3, clip out what I dont want, then save a small mp3 to use as a ringtone. One could pick a song that is easily heard, and make a ringtone.

Love "Shake It Off" so much you wish you could wake up to it every morning? Don't waste money buying a ringtone from the iTunes store. Any song in your iTunes library can be made into a ringtone. Just open iTunes and follow these steps.

7. Right click, select "Get Info" and rename with .m4r. We need our file to be in this format so it can be recognized as a ringtone. My song currently reads "06 Shake It Off 1.m4a,' so I change it to say "06 Shake It Off.m4r." Then I hit enter.

Before you start showing it off, you have some quick cleaning to do: We need to get your original song back to normal. Get back into iTunes on your computer and find the original song, which is still there. Right-click on it and select Get Info > Options. Uncheck the boxes next to Start Time and Stop Time.

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