I'm looking for a decent text/notification tone. I still have yet to find one that really grabs my attention. Feel free to mention some of your favorites and if you're up to it maybe attach a link for them. They can be stock tones or homemade ones!

My problem with message tones is this: when a new conversation is started I get a notification tone, but for subsequent messages the tone reverts to a kind of Swoosh in reverse, not audible unless you're looking out for it. If I make any changes in the course of the conversation such as choosing a new tone, the next incoming message sounds it correctly, then subsequent messages lose that tone again. I have checked Messages, Notifications and Sounds settings, have restarted and hard reset, and re-installed iOS11. Any ideas?


Ios 1-6 Message Tone Download


DOWNLOAD 🔥 https://byltly.com/2y7ZCx 🔥



I'm having the same issues with my Iphone 8 Plus. When the screen is locked my phone doesn't vibrate or make a sound when I get an e-mail or text message. I think it has something to do with IOS 11. I reset my phone numerous times. It will work for awhile and then stop working. It's very frustrating.

Does anyone know how to fix this issue yet? When my screen is locked I get no notification that I have a text message. I only know when I open my phone and see the badge app icon. All notification settings correct, this has only started happening since the ios 11 update.

Bluetooth seems to be the culprit here as correctly isolate by a few contributors. Switching OFF BT (from settings and not from control panel) restores sounds/notifications for messages/whatsapp etc and switching BT back on disables the sounds.

Middle of the night, finally realised what is happening: you don't get a message tone if the conversation is open. Close the conversation so that you only see the headers, and the tone sounds just fine. On the iPad that means having a New Message open so that existing conversations aren't visible. I can go to bed now.

Did the restore, it didn't fix the problem. My phone is still inconsistently sounding text notifications with: bluetooth off or on, for imessage and SMS, using default and custom tones. It's definitely ios11-related.

The issue sfor those who dont know is by design, when using an iPhone and its locked it will route all text messages notifaction alerts to the iWatch. If the phone is unlocked it will not. Therefore a locked iphine will not notify you of a message with the text tone instead it comes out to the watch. If the watch is on silent (which is can be if the phone has been switched to silent duering the day, the watch stay on silent) you don't get anything.

Not sure who thought through this use case scenario but its doesn't work at all. I have a watch and a phone and I need both to notify me of a message. If i don't want to hear either I have a silent button on both

You are saying that you are not getting your important messages because YOU set both devices to silent so you wont be bothered. How is that an Apple issue? You can set your do not disturb to allow certain calls and texts to go through no matter what. Your issue is caused by you not by a design flaw. You can also set the watch to vibrate for texts.

To give this contact the option to override a Focus, so any important messages can get through, turn on Emergency Bypass. You might turn it on for a family member, caretaker, or colleague, for example.

I'm looking to have custom tones for the Messages app on macOS. I'm currently running macOS 10.13.6. I successfully did this for my iPhone, but I can't seem to do it with the Messages app. I've already added the sounds to my ~/Library/Sounds folder and they successfuly show up under the Sound Effects tab in System Preferences>Sound as well as under Mail>Preferences>New Messages Sounds.

When I first got my S10, I was able to set individual alert messages per contact. The process was simple; Find the text thread, tap the three dots, go to notifications, scroll down to 'Custom'.


The custom option is just gone. I have all the phone's default notification sounds, and that's it. There's no option to set a custom text tone for any of my contacts. I've tried editing their contact information, I've looked through my phone's options with every combination of search terms and menus I can think of, nothing.


Does anyone know how to fix this? It's incredibly frustrating.


It would appear that you have to convert Notification files to an oog format, copy it to the Notifications directory of the phone's internal storage, and then register it as a Phone Ringtone to get the custom Notification to show up in the list.

Put alongside similar findings from other studies in the pandemic, it does not appear how a message is framed influences compliance with public health guidelines, although the framing of the message may influence the risks a person is willing to take, according to the research.

I just realized that my iPhone SE, iOS 12.3, isn't issuing the "ding" tone when texts are received. The Messages app shows a badge (small red circle) when a message arrives. The ring for a phone call works correctly.

The text tone sounds correctly in Settings > Sounds > Text Tone, Do Not Disturb is turned off, and Settings > Notifications > Messages is set to "Allow." I've restarted (soft and hard), and the Mute switch on the side of the case is in the up (sound allowed) position. Selecting another text tone has no effect, the different tone is also not issued.

It appears that if you have Messages in iCloud enabled on the iPhone, and you're also signed in to Messages on a Mac with the same Apple ID, and the Mac is logged in and awake, then the iPhone doesn't make an alert sound for new messages. Presumably the idea is that you're at the Mac and will see the message alert there.

MESSAGES app.

After the Android 13 update on my Fairphone 3+, when I receive an SMS text message, the phone vibrates and I get a pop-up, but there is no tone, despite the [Ring and notification volume] set to maximum.

When I check the [Sound and vibration] settings, there is no option to choose an [SMS ringtone], as there was prior to the upgrade.

Any ideas how this can be fixed?

Now more than ever, sales teams are relying on emails and messages to set up appointments with prospects. This applies to outbound business development, or lead (or demand) generation teams; but equally this issue is just as important to inbound teams too.

Whether you are doing outbound or inbound, what you say in emails and messages is as important as how you say it. It all comes down to tone of voice (TOV).

Tone of voice, alongside the actual messaging, and way of wording (also known as the content or copy) of sales emails and messages, alongside other materials, is crucial. It can make all the difference between a prospect wanting a call/demo, or not. It can make the difference between winning or losing a potential sale.

Hi!

Is it possible to set a ringtone as a text tone in iOS 17? Bought a new text tone to set for one of my friends. It is categorioed as a ringtone though, so can't seem to set it as a text tone. Anyone know how to make it work?

Thankful for your help!

Background:  Young adults are a particularly hard to reach group using conventional health promotion practices as they do not see nutrition messages as personally relevant to them. Text messaging (short message service, SMS) offers an innovative approach to reaching young adults to support and promote dietary behavior change.

Methods:  A total of 39 young adults aged 18-30 years residing in Perth, Western Australia participated in four focus groups. Participants briefly discussed their perception of healthy eating and their responses to messages about increasing fruit and vegetables, and reducing "junk food" and alcohol intake. They ranked their preference for 15 nutrition messages across 3 dietary behaviors (fruit and vegetables, junk food, and alcohol) with 5 different message tones (authoritative, empathetic, generation Y, solutions, and substitutions) and identified the messages most likely to persuade young adults to change their diet. A 5-point ranking of the nutrition messages was from the most likely to least likely to persuade (1-5). The focus groups were conducted by a trained facilitator and observer and were recorded. Data driven content analysis was used to explore themes. Tonal preferences and potential motivators were collated and frequencies presented.

Results:  Participants ranked offering substitutes (29%, 11/39) and using empathy (22%, 9/39) as the most persuasive message techniques in improving diets of young adults, with low responses for Generation Y (17%, 7/39), solutions (17%, 7/39), and authoritative (15%, 6/39) tones. Females were more likely to consider substitution messages persuasive (35%, 7/20) compared with males (22%, 4/19). A greater proportion of males compared with females considered authoritative messages persuasive: (22%, 4/19) compared with (7%, 1/20). There is a strong preference for a substitution tone for fruit and vegetable messages (52%, 20/39), and no overall message tone preference for junk food and alcohol messages. Substitutions were viewed as helpful and practical. Empathy was liked as it acknowledged previous efforts. Responses to authoritative tone were mixed with some feeling guilt while others found them informative. Acceptability of the solutions depended on the behavioral change and acceptability of the solution proposed. Generation Y tone had some support for junk food and alcohol messages, and if favored, was considered casual, humorous, catchy, and motivational.

Conclusions:  Substitutions and tone of empathy were favored as the most likely execution styles to motivate nutrition behavior change across all participants. There is no "one size fits all" with different tones preferred by individuals for different dietary behaviors. Although text messaging provides instant message delivery direct to the individual, these results demonstrate the complexity of developing motivational nutrition message for young adults. These findings reveal the importance of considering the tone and content and pretesting messages for health promotion text message interventions. 006ab0faaa

liqui moly logo

hausa bible java app download

stellarpacs dicom viewer download

download mp4 clip converter

download iheartradio app for windows 10