Option B is definitely the coolest, just select the "Send To Your Phone" link and the ring tone will be automatically downloaded by your phone. Depending on your phone, you'll either receive (A) a page on how to manually code the ring tone into your phone OR (B) a page with the converted ringtone that you may send to your phone via SMS (Short Message Service). This page will take any RTTTL or Nokring ring tone, and convert it into a format for many of the various phones out there (Ericcson, Motorola, Siemens, Audiovox, Nokia, etc.)Īfter pasting the ring tone into the message box, click on your corresponding phone type to get the appropriate conversion. If anyone would be happy to try it out, (or donate me a phone that can play longer ring tones ) that'd be splendid.įirst, copy a version of the ring tone (see below) to your clipboard, then go to this link (the UniRing homepage): I've only been able to test out the Extra Short function since my phone's a Nokia 3360 and can only handle 60+ tones. I made three versions: extra short, short, and full. Granted it's monophonic, but at least it sounds correct. All it took was a converting the fight song into midi format, and then exporting that to RTTTL. But, I listened to some of them and all those ringtones had was at the most 2 bars. You can get your ringtones for free of the Internet, like Y'z Guy said. But that didn't help me since my phone wasn't one of the models that had the "composer". After doing much research tonight, here's the scoop:Ĭougarfan has a list of instructions for Nokia phones.
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