Why did people slowly stop using songs as ringtones? Was it just a fun short-lived trend from when mobile technology was new, which we scrapped when the technology started being taken more seriously?

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.


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I have a Droid Maxx 2 from Motorola. I have been attempting to use a music ringtone for all incoming calls. The file I have been using is an mp3 file of a song, about 30 seconds long. No matter what I try, whenever I receive an incoming call, only about the first 5 seconds of the song plays, then it keep restarting from the beginning. It continues to keep going back to the beginning of the clip a few times until the call finally goes to voicemail. I have tried clearing the cache, resetting all app preferences, clearing all app data, doing a soft reboot, doing a hard reboot, and even booted in safe mode. The problem still remains. At the advice of an agent from Verizon, I contacted Motorola (Lenovo) on their community forums, and they were unable to help. I first used the Ringdroid app (which I downloaded from the Google Play Store) to trim the original (longer) file to about 30 seconds, then set it as a ringtone. I also tried some other ringtone maker apps. Finally, I even tried just transferring the file by USB from my PC to the Ringtones folder of the phone. Strangely, when I tap on the file name in the Ringtones list on the phone (under settings), the entire clip will play. The problem is when incoming calls are received. Hopefully, someone will be able to help. Thank you.

Most of the phones will only play a 30 second Ring Tone and if you use a full MP3, it will cut off and use only the first 30 seconds of it. Some notifications will play 5-10 and alarms will usually play the entire song. I know Motorola phones are limited to 30 seconds. If you download any of the apps to make ringtones they will also usually limit you to making a 30 second clip.

Hello, I have the entire song (mp3 file) on the computer (about 9 minutes long). I transferred the entire file without trimming it to the phone's ringtone folder using USB. I then set the entire song to be the ringtone. When an incoming call is received, it still only plays about the first 5 seconds or so, then it keeps going back to the beginning. The file is not corrupt or anything. In fact, when I tap on the file name in the ringtone list on the phone, the entire song plays (not just the first 30 seconds). The problem seems to be with the incoming ring signal. I have tried going outside where I have a good cell signal, but I still have the problem. It also does it on other ringtones as well (only playing about 5 seconds and restarting). Do you have any idea what could be wrong? Thank you.

Hello, I did what you suggested (placing the entire file in the music folder, then using my music app to set it as a ringtone). It will still only play about 5 seconds for an incoming call, then keeps starting over. I also set it as the ringtone for other things like text messaging, and the whole 30 seconds will play. Again, it seems that there is something going on with the incoming signal for phone calls that keeps restarting the ringtone.

I went in to the app manager and cleared the cache and memory of the phone app, but the ringtone is still only playing about 5 seconds before it keeps going back to the beginning. In the past, I have tried a soft reboot, a hard reboot, even using safe mode, and nothing helps. I hope I don't have to do a factory reset, especially since that may not work anyway. Again, the file is good, and the entire song will play when I tap on the file name in the ringtone list.

I just tried a different full-length song and set it as the ringtone. Once again, only about the first 5 seconds of it will play for an incoming call, then it keeps restarting. The entire song will play when I tap on the file name in the ringtone list. Also, about 30 seconds of it will play when I use it as the notification tone for a text message.

This denizen of the arid and rocky mountains and canyonlands of the western US like most wrens, has a really interesting song. Canyon Wrens are well adapted to their dry and rocky terrain where they are found climbing on rocks and looking for insects such as spiders in rock crevices With a white front, dark brown and rust body overall, they have very long beaks which they need to pry insects from between rocks. Finding a Canyon Wren is so much easier if you just listen for the song, which typically precedes the appearance of this attractive and musical wren.

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The mobile phone has only one speaker for ringtone, so mono.

Additionally I can assume the speaker is not the best, so the equalizer.

Sometimes the music is faint so I add a gain. Then I choose the gain which sounds best.

Right now I live in a place where every other resident is a JW. There are funny random encounters with brothers here and there.


The other day a man walked by my house and a Kingdom Hall song played on his phone. I don't remember which one, but I recognized it immediately. I thought it was an interesting way to let us know about it and a good idea for a ringtone on our phones.


What kind of JW music would you put on your phone ringtone?


I'd like to put myself a brodcasting intro, it's soft and not intimidating. But I can't find an mp4 file with the intro element cut out. Seems like it has to be done on its own.

I used to use kingdom songs for my ringtones. One time my phone started ringing during the meeting and everyone heard a kingdom song, i looked at the Sound brother like it was his fault for playing a song by mistake...

I liked making and using an 8 bit / chip tune rendition for some of our kingdom melodies for my cell phone in the past. I thought it was funny and cute. Other than that, I also like using some of older, and lesser known kingdom melodies for sound of wake up alarms or a ringtone.

While I might like to use a Kingdom Song for a ringtone - my hearing is not what it used to be ... therefore, I need a ringtone that is loud and distinguishable as a phone so I use an actual "ring" tone on my phone.

I create my own ringtones using Digital Audio Workstation software. I currently have made the 4 convention original songs into ringtones as well as a little bit of their introduction instrumentals into notification sounds!

I personally use Our Joy Eternally as my call ringtone. I'm not sure if sound files are downloadable here but feel free to use these as your ringtones if you can! I haven't uploaded the notification sounds though for the time being. Let me know how it goes for you, but PLEASE do not share them yourself to others. I currently store them on my google drive so if you or someone else would like the file, I can share it via email.

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.

To add these ringtone files to your iPhone: Download the .m4r files to your desktop. Then, connect your device to your computer using a lightning-to-USB cable. Open iTunes and drag the .m4r file onto the device you want to add it to under Devices. It will automatically sync the ringtone with your iPhone or iPad. Go to Settings > Sounds & Haptics. Select the alert you'd like to change, and you should see your downloads available to select under Ringtones.

To add these ringtone files on Android: Download the .mp3 file. Go to Settings > Sound > Device ringtone. Tap the Add button to launch the media manager app. If your phone has several file/media manager apps, select Music Player from the pop-up box. You will see a list of music files stored on your phone. Select your JMU ringtone and tap Done.

Calum Newton, who goes by CandyMoore.mp3 on social media, created an incredible remix of the ringtone, so we reached out and asked him to create a version that we could share with you. His remix is now available for users to customize their Teams experience, and it hits hard enough to make you want to dance.

To set a song as your ringtone it needs to saved in your Files app or must be purchased and downloaded on your phone. You can't use songs that you just have saved on Apple Music or another streaming service such as Spotify.

The easiest way to do this is to pick out your favorite song and save it to files using an mp3 converter or buy it in the iTunes Store. Then you'll have to create a loop of that song in GarageBand and export it as a ringtone. Don't worry, the process is quite easy, and we'll talk you through the steps.

First, download the song you'd like and save it to your iPhone. The easiest way to do this is probably by downloading the song you'd like from YouTube, and converting that to an mp3. Click the link above if you need help with that.

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. ff782bc1db

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