Re: M4a to M4r

2013-02-07 Thread Stacey Robinson
Thanks Colin, I'll give this a try. On Feb 7, 2013, at 4:42 AM, Red.Falcon wrote: > Hi there! > Just to let you know alerts can be up to 29 seconds and ringtones 39 and if > you like when you've changed to M4R then just command+o and it should just > start playing and be added to the ringtones s

Re: M4a to M4r

2013-02-07 Thread Red.Falcon
Hi there! Just to let you know alerts can be up to 29 seconds and ringtones 39 and if you like when you've changed to M4R then just command+o and it should just start playing and be added to the ringtones section of your iTunes! hth Colin On 7 Feb 2013, at 05:30, Stacey Robinson wrote: > Alex,

Re: M4a to M4r

2013-02-06 Thread Stacey Robinson
Alex, Is that all I do? rename the extension and put the tone in automatically add to itunes? On Feb 6, 2013, at 11:27 PM, Alex Hall wrote: > Locate them in the finder, or Windows explorer, and rename their extensions. > My understanding is that iTunes and iOS rely on file extensions to > categ

Re: M4a to M4r

2013-02-06 Thread Alex Hall
Locate them in the finder, or Windows explorer, and rename their extensions. My understanding is that iTunes and iOS rely on file extensions to categorize, but at the end of the day all those files are just AAC. So, to make a ringtone, you'd create the AAC file and rename it to .m4r. Music is .m

M4a to M4r

2013-02-06 Thread Stacey Robinson
Hi all, I purchased a bunch of ringtones from iTunes, and for some reason, iTunes thinks they're music. I looked, and they are m4a files. How do I convert them to m4r so they will be tones like they're supposed to be? Thanks, Stacey -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the