Post by Nicole on Dec 11, 2011 22:30:49 GMT 1
This is basically pretty simple. I want to explain it to you on the basis of "Parlay" from the soundtrack of 'Pirates of the Caribbean – At World’s End'.
I like the place with the sounds of the guitar rigs, when Orlando Bloom, Johnny Depp and Co. is on the sandbar and the camera flies towards her and always wanted to have she as a ringtone. So far, I've never got to it.
I've the soundtrack on my Laptop; otherwise you have to copy that song at the first on the Computer.
In my case it is an m4a file, because I bought it directly from iTunes Store (= not directly as CD), if you copied it, of course, you must select mp3 (my example is the Windows Media Player).
The folder with the CD name will be created automatically, and - ideally - at the same time the CD information downloaded from the internet (like here with the German original recording of 'Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat', but can also be created manually).
Now I create on the desktop a COPY of the file so I do not destroy the original file if I shorten it to the appropriate length and store by mistake.
Now I open my program with which I edit the file, which is in my case the AVS Audio Editor (avail as freeware, however, in order to use them you must activate it, which will cost for one year about 29-39 Euro – with that you can also 17 other programs of AVS down load and use).
Ideally, of course, if you already approximately know the place where your favorite place is. In my case it is with about 0:51 and I put the cursor to this point and cut off the rest before and after.
Then I lose still about 48 seconds, but I can live with because I had the entire rack cannot use anyway because it is over a minute long.
Now I must still save the changed file.
Depending on which phone you have you then select the appropriate file extension; iPhone users need m4a (see above) and will then also asked whether an iPhone ringtone should be created – there then we put a check (and then automatically will be a file with the extension m4r created; m4r is the file extension which we need as a ringtone for the iPhone).
And here we have all three files together : the sources file below, in the middle the iPhone ringtone and also the ring tone for most other mobile phones.
As the ringtone on your mobile phone comes now of course I can only say for my iPhone, all others please look after their manual or contact the support of the manufacturer. I click on the m4r file and hence it is added automatically to iTunes, more specifically, in the folder 'sounds' (how exactly this is called in other languages I know, of course not).
The next time you sync, it is added to the iPhone ringtones.
Done! ;D
I like the place with the sounds of the guitar rigs, when Orlando Bloom, Johnny Depp and Co. is on the sandbar and the camera flies towards her and always wanted to have she as a ringtone. So far, I've never got to it.
I've the soundtrack on my Laptop; otherwise you have to copy that song at the first on the Computer.
In my case it is an m4a file, because I bought it directly from iTunes Store (= not directly as CD), if you copied it, of course, you must select mp3 (my example is the Windows Media Player).
The folder with the CD name will be created automatically, and - ideally - at the same time the CD information downloaded from the internet (like here with the German original recording of 'Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat', but can also be created manually).
Now I create on the desktop a COPY of the file so I do not destroy the original file if I shorten it to the appropriate length and store by mistake.
Now I open my program with which I edit the file, which is in my case the AVS Audio Editor (avail as freeware, however, in order to use them you must activate it, which will cost for one year about 29-39 Euro – with that you can also 17 other programs of AVS down load and use).
Ideally, of course, if you already approximately know the place where your favorite place is. In my case it is with about 0:51 and I put the cursor to this point and cut off the rest before and after.
Then I lose still about 48 seconds, but I can live with because I had the entire rack cannot use anyway because it is over a minute long.
Now I must still save the changed file.
Depending on which phone you have you then select the appropriate file extension; iPhone users need m4a (see above) and will then also asked whether an iPhone ringtone should be created – there then we put a check (and then automatically will be a file with the extension m4r created; m4r is the file extension which we need as a ringtone for the iPhone).
And here we have all three files together : the sources file below, in the middle the iPhone ringtone and also the ring tone for most other mobile phones.
As the ringtone on your mobile phone comes now of course I can only say for my iPhone, all others please look after their manual or contact the support of the manufacturer. I click on the m4r file and hence it is added automatically to iTunes, more specifically, in the folder 'sounds' (how exactly this is called in other languages I know, of course not).
The next time you sync, it is added to the iPhone ringtones.
Done! ;D