ednesday, 25 July 2018 12:58 AM
>> To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
>> Subject: Re: Create custom ringtones for your iPhone, CNET
>>
>> Why would one go through all this?
>>
>> In the past, I've just taken songs I wanted to use as ringtones, marked off
>
aries
> Sent: Wednesday, 25 July 2018 12:58 AM
> To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
> Subject: Re: Create custom ringtones for your iPhone, CNET
>
> Why would one go through all this?
>
> In the past, I've just taken songs I wanted to use as ringtones, marked off
&g
Yeah I use to do that also.
Make the time specific to what you require and then saave.
-Original Message-
From: 'Donna Goodin' via MacVisionaries
Sent: Wednesday, 25 July 2018 12:58 AM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: Create custom ringtones for your iPhone,
Oh that beats a story from a friend of mine.
His daughter recorded him snoring once and well... now she does the same
when he phones her.
Kare
On Tue, 24 Jul 2018, 'Bill Gallik' via MacVisionaries wrote:
This is not just about money so far as I???m concerned; the ???Canned Ring
Tones???
I agree. Also, I think most of the canned ringtones are too short. I like
having control over the length, the content, and all that.
Cheers,
Donna
> On Jul 24, 2018, at 9:55 AM, 'Bill Gallik' via MacVisionaries
> wrote:
>
> This is not just about money so far as I’m concerned; the “Canned R
This is not just about money so far as I’m concerned; the “Canned Ring Tones”
frequently are an unwanted snippet cut from a song (or other source) whereas
I’d much rather use a different snippet from the same source.
For example, a song named “Don’t Tell Mama I’ve Been Drinkin’” by Alan Jackson
OK, I was curious to see if this still worked. It doesn't. Something must have
changed, I'm guessing in High Sierra. I cannot get the new ringtone to import
into iTunes. Pity. It seems like they've taken something that should be
ridiculously easy and made it complicated. Guess they want us
It is.
1. In iTunes, highlight the song you want.
2. From the File Menu choose show in Finder.
3. Copy the file to your desktop.
4. Rename it, so you don't accidentally screw up your original file.
5. Open the desktop file in iTunes.
6. Press CMD-I then options.
7. Mark off the start and end poin
In what app do you do this?
Sounds simple enough.
/Krister
> 24 juli 2018 kl. 14:58 skrev 'Donna Goodin' via MacVisionaries
> :
>
> Why would one go through all this?
>
> In the past, I've just taken songs I wanted to use as ringtones, marked off
> the 30 seconds I wanted to use as a ringtone
Why would one go through all this?
In the past, I've just taken songs I wanted to use as ringtones, marked off the
30 seconds I wanted to use as a ringtone, saved it to my desktop, changed the
file extension to M4R, and hit cmd-O. It works like a charm.
Cheers,
Donna
> On Jul 23, 2018, at 10:3
riginal Message-
From: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com On
Behalf Of M. Taylor
Sent: Tuesday, 24 July 2018 3:33 PM
To: macvisionaries@googlegroups.com
Subject: Create custom ringtones for your iPhone, CNET
Create custom ringtones for your iPhone
Turn a song, sound clip, MP3 file or just about any
Create custom ringtones for your iPhone
Turn a song, sound clip, MP3 file or just about anything else into your very
own iPhone ringtone.
By Rick Broida, July 23, 2018 2:14 PM PDT
Ben Geskin/Twitter
Does your iPhone ($1,000 at Cricket Wireless) sound like every other iPhone?
Does it play the de
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