I thought this would be interesting to share, think about your electronic use and what your daily life would be like without all the electronics you use. It is just shocking to me the changes and forward progress that has been made in all the different electronic industries in the last decade. Now that I have just gone off the deep end with this no electronic thing, I am going to go make some coffee, download some ringtones and make sure the DVR is recording Sons of Guns. TTYL

The first thing you must do is enable dual ringtones. Android makes this very simple. Open up Settings, and then go to Sound & vibration. From within that screen, tap Phone ringtone. In the resulting window (Figure A), tap the On/Off slider for Set ringtone for each SIM card (this will only appear if you have two SIM cards inserted).


Joy Of Little Things Ringtone Download


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Hi,

I have several SIM Cards, but I cannot choose one or the other for ringtones.

What I send is the image I get when I go to

Settings

Sounds

Ringtone.

Immediatly there is this list where I can select a ringtone.

There is nothing like the question wether I would like to use different for each sims, in the settings for sim there is no choice for ringtones.

I put my third phone in the waistband of my leggings

only u have this number

6 plus vibrates with your own ringtone

i smile when i hear simulated children laughing

cause i know it's u

it's the little things that make me smile

i keep them just for myself

i like u so much

but it makes me nervous when u don't call

under my breath i say

Don't make me be resilient

i so want to be soft

if u let me be myself

u will be the first one who ever did

But the most irritating feature about it was the ringtone. I originally selected the old fashioned telephone ring as my call alert sound - just like most of my colleagues. Every time I visited HQ, a bell would go off and eight of us would start scrabbling around to see if our mobile was the source.

Haha!

I was wondering whose phone that was playing rock classics in the office! I used to have Take That's Relight My Fire as my ringtone but now I have a rather jaunty little tune that sounds like the Mexican Hat Dance...

The ringtone is a standard 'ring ring', although I'm very much tempted to switch it for one of the classic tracks from Flight of the Conchords (I'm thinking the China Girl homage at the end of Bowie). As for the SMS texting, I'm afraid I've succumbed to all sorts of geekery:

Different

I have not gone for a rock classic as my ringtone. The tardis sound from Dr Who announces all calls on my phone. This is distinctively different from all other ring tones both in my office and wherever else I go!

A break from silence

I always have my phone on silent, apart from when I am out shopping or on the train because I am notoriously tricky to get hold of so want to give my callers a bit of a break. My ringtone alternates between 'Brooklyn is burning' by Head Automatica which is for when I am being considerate. And for my obnoxious days (usually when I am surrounded by hip/trip-hop kids on buses) I change it to 'Scott Farcas takes it on the chin' by Less Than Jake - it makes people jump!

The saddest thing is that, more than 4 months later, I remembered this thread, and was exceedingly jealous that John could get his Blackberry Pearl to use anything other than the standard ringtones, because I couldn't!

But upgrades are amazing things and my new Blackberry Curve will sync with itunes directories and can use any tune as a ringtone so it's a game even I can play. At the moment it's Honky Tonk Women by the Rolling stones - there's just time for the cow bells, drums and opening guitar riff.

Hubby, however, had a perfectly good telephone-sounding ringtone on his Nokia Lumia 900. Of course that meant he needed to change it. And, when he did decide on a new ringtone, he changed it to something that he knew would annoy the crap out of me. He downloaded Barbie Girl.

That is hilarious! I am a Barbie collector, so that ringtone would be perfect for me, but your husband is too much!

I just have a doorbell sound for my default ring and some little pre-installed song for my husband. (I know exactly at what point in the song that he will be pissed when I pick it up-I have a very needy man who thinks my world revolves around him-so I try to answer it before then.)

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?).

I'm not primarily an Android developer, so I might be missing some important obvious things. I tried googling this to no end and I got tons of examples of how to play stuff using RingtoneManager and even MediaPlayer or some such, but I didn't see any mention of the background problem.

Imagining a horror movie (recently saw A Quiet Place) where only those with the kiddie voice ringtones all die, but only the viewer gets it right from the start. The colleagues have all been trained to couch their annoyance and focus on rational factors; except maybe two childless workers who can only feel the irritation factors but suppress that idea because they need not only their jobs but their social credits for continued and promotional work. It garners scathing reviews for its filmic work, but audiences love it, and it passes the Bechdel test.

I actually got used to setting my phone on vibrate at my first job. Our manager set a rule, that whoever was caught with their phone ringing would have to treat the office (~10 people) to a soft drink. At one point things got so out of hand, that people started requesting the exact type of juice that the culprit was supposed to buy. :P

At a former job, the person before me had been the kind to give everyone on earth her work number. So I spent about a year getting calls about things like family funerals, picking up her kid from school.

Could you imagine if the adults did everything they could but the child died, and the mother was at the grocery store or getting her hair done instead of being by their side and telling them they loved them one more time? We live in a world where awful things happen, but technology allows us to make some of them a little less awful. We just have to use that technology responsibly and with kindness towards those around us.

My guess is that the boss is too passive to deal with the general ringtone situation and only singled out the LW because she received a complaint about that particular ringtone. Otherwise, why not just ask the LW (and everyone) to put their phone on vibrate?

My ringtone is Baroque Hoedown, an early synthesizer composition by groundbreaking electronic artists Kingsley & Perry which Disneyland later used as the theme song to the popular and long running Main Street Electrical Parade.

Oh God, ringtones. I had a coworker who never put hers on silent, always left it on her (cubicle) desk when she was somewhere else, and had a husband who would never leave a message, just kept calling until she picked up. A couple of times I had to go find her and demand she make it stop.

You've heard about them on social media. Your friends are raving about them. But what's the deal with boyfriend ringtones? The trend of setting a custom ringtone for your significant other has been skyrocketing in popularity, but it's not just a passing fad. There's more to it than you might think.

The personalization of tech isn't a new phenomenon; we've been customizing wallpapers and profile pictures for years. However, boyfriend ringtones bring this to another level, engaging one of our most primitive senses: sound. This plays into the auditory recognition our brains have always used to identify key figures in our lives. Pretty nifty, right?

Believe it or not, boyfriend ringtones are a minor but potent tool for strengthening emotional bonds. You get a little dopamine kick every time you hear "your song" or a unique sound linked to your partner. It can make even a grocery list reminder feel romantic.

This little trick doesn't just keep the spark alive; it's a sonic badge of honor. Your partner's custom ringtone, believe it or not, announces your relationship status to the world, much like wearing a couple's tee or sharing a dessert. It's a public declaration made in a very personal, intimate setting.

However, not all boyfriend ringtones are created equal. Depending on the choice of tune, a ringtone can either say "I'm head over heels for this person," or "I still haven't gotten around to setting a special ringtone for my S.O." And trust me, your partner will notice the difference.

You may think setting a ringtone is a simple, mundane task, but there's more to it from a psychological perspective. The sound that your phone makes when your boyfriend calls you can actually influence your emotions and, by extension, your relationship.

A 2017 study published in the Journal of Social Psychology showed that auditory stimuli can significantly affect mood and behavioral responses. Ever wonder why horror movies are ten times scarier with the sound on? It's the same idea here: the ringtone you choose for your boyfriend can either excite you or annoy you, and that's a big deal.

The psychology of ringtones taps into what's known as "classical conditioning." Think Pavlov's dogs: just as they learned to associate the sound of a bell with food, you can grow to associate a specific ringtone with love, affection, or even a sense of home. This is why it's crucial to pick the right melody or tune for your boyfriend's calls. 006ab0faaa

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