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Breakdown of My Ringtone Process

This is a post for the people that our having problems creating Ringtones with the updated iTunes (v 7.4). This is the way I am doing it. It is by no means the ONLY way, but it is a way that works for me as well as keep everything organized.

(1) Select your song. If you want to edit it (picking a particular starting and ending point) you can use the method described in earlier posts (see below) or with some free audio programs. I am on a MAC and like Audacity, but there are others.

(2) Create a folder titled "iPhone Ringtones" so you can keep track of all your Ringtones and come back to them if you need to. This also keeps all of your files neat and tidy and causes less confusion as to where your files are.

(3) If you are using the "itunes" method, select your original song in iTunes. Select "Get Info" in itunes. Click on the "Options" tab. Here you can increase the volume as well as select a starting and ending point for your song.

If you are using this method, you can skip step 4.

(4) If you are using an audio editing program, edit your song and then export as an AIFF or WAV file. Export the song to your "iPhone Ringtones" folder

(5) Open your exported song in iTunes. Select your song and right-click (if you don't have a right-click mouse, use control-click). Select "Convert Selection to AAC." This option is available to me because I have my settings under "Preferences/Advanced/Importing" to "Import Using AAC Encoder." Once it is done converting, right-click the converted song and select "Show in Finder." This will reveal where the song is located on your hard drive. Move the song to your designated "iPhone Ringtones folder" that I told you to create in step 2. If this is merely copying the file and not actually moving it, delete the original file if you don't want duplicates all over the place. Again, this keeps things nice and tidy.

(6) Delete the MP3 playlist file (the one you used BEFORE converting it to AAC) as well as the converted AAC playlist file from iTunes. This will keep iTunes from having several different directories for the same song, keeping things tidy and neat as well as keeping you from having a headache on keeping track of where everything is.

(7) Create a playlist on iTunes called "iPhone Ringtones." This is also for convenience sakes. It will help you have easy access to your Ringtones "playlist" and be the only place where iTunes keeps a directory of your Ringtones items (besides the Ringtones tab).

(8) In the finder, select the song you converted to AAC and press "Command-I" (or right-click and select "Get Info.") and IN THE GET INFO WINDOW (NOT the finder) change the extension of this file to "m4r" - IMPORTANT - Do NOT change the extension name in the finder. IT might appear as m4r in the name, but if you Get Info on this file, you will notice that the file now has TWO extension to it (i.e. "Start Me up.m4r.mr4") which REALLY confuses iTunes as well your iPhone.

**The song HAS to be in an AAC format FIRST before proceeding to renaming the extension. MP3s do NOT work. Repeat, MP3s do NOT work.

(9) Select your mp4 (lowercase works just fine) song and drag it into your "iPhone Ringtones" playlist in iTunes.

(10) Now sync up your iPhone, select the "Ringtones" tab. Select your songs and you should be good to go.

Hope this helps.
 
For those who may have not of thought about it, Garageband is a great editor. You can import MP3 and AAC files and edit them. Or you can make great original ringtones using the built in loops.
 
That should be m4r. Drag the file to iTunes icon or right click and choose to open in iTunes.

i still can't get it to appear in my ringtones tab. where are you supposed to drag it? and on a PC is m4r in capitals or lower case?
 
window user need help please

I know most of you are mac users but can you please help a gal out. I have a xp and im alittle confused. I don't understand hold to change the file extention to M4r. I imported the mp3 into itunes and converted it to AAC than removed it from my library and went into itunes folder found it there and am wonder how to change the file extention i can only rename the file name no matter what i try the extention stays the same.
If someone can give a window user a walkthrough i would be so greatfull. My son is getting a Mac for Christmas i can wait I'll be on it more than him it looks like. LOL
Thanks again to anyone who can help me.:confused:
 
Question to everyone: What iphone software version are you all using?

I'm using software version 1.0 and just updated iTunes from 7.3.2 to 7.4.0.28
and i'm not seeing the tab for ringtones after connecting my iphone to itunes.

Also is this itunes version correctly 7.4.0.28 ??

Thx in advance
 
I can't seem to get this work. I've got an mp3 file that I've changed over to M4R through getinfo. When I double click it, it does not get added to itunes. It tells me theres no default program to open this type of file. I'm on a mac. Any ideas?

That happened to me.Just double click the file and when it asks for an app to use select iTunes.This is under the assumption that your iTunes is set to import using AAC.

Oh and...

There's another reason Apple is waiting a week to release the update for the iPhone and this discussion is it.Much easier for Apple to read this stuff than it is to look around all over the interwebs for hacks to fix.;)
 
I know most of you are mac users but can you please help a gal out. I have a xp and im alittle confused. I don't understand hold to change the file extention to M4r. I imported the mp3 into itunes and converted it to AAC than removed it from my library and went into itunes folder found it there and am wonder how to change the file extention i can only rename the file name no matter what i try the extention stays the same.
If someone can give a window user a walkthrough i would be so greatfull. My son is getting a Mac for Christmas i can wait I'll be on it more than him it looks like. LOL
Thanks again to anyone who can help me.:confused:

Select the song file. Right-click it and select "Properties." In this window, select "Change Name." This is where you change the name of the extension. I believe this should do the trick. Let me know if this works for you.
 
You have to do more than just change the name in xp

I know most of you are mac users but can you please help a gal out. I have a xp and im alittle confused. I don't understand hold to change the file extention to M4r. I imported the mp3 into itunes and converted it to AAC than removed it from my library and went into itunes folder found it there and am wonder how to change the file extention i can only rename the file name no matter what i try the extention stays the same.
If someone can give a window user a walkthrough i would be so greatfull. My son is getting a Mac for Christmas i can wait I'll be on it more than him it looks like. LOL
Thanks again to anyone who can help me.:confused:

Open up any folder. CLick the "tools" tab. Then drag down to "folder options". Then click the "view" tab. Then unclick the box that says "hide extensions for known file types". Then you can see and edit the extensions right in the filename. ..(mac users, all together now, yell "what the heck do you have to do all that for, must be a PC!")

Just set up "william shattner sings Mr. Tamborine man" as the ringtone, sweeeet
 
Open up any folder. CLick the "tools" tab. Then drag down to "folder options". Then click the "view" tab. Then unclick the box that says "hide extensions for known file types". Then you can see and edit the extensions right in the filename. ..(mac users, all together now, yell "what the heck do you have to do all that for, must be a PC!")

Just set up "william shattner sings Mr. Tamborine man" as the ringtone, sweeeet

Saaber shoots he scores!

That is the critical bit of info missing from Windows walkthroughs. Changed the hide and bam worked like a charm.
 
I know most of you are mac users but can you please help a gal out. I have a xp and im alittle confused. I don't understand hold to change the file extention to M4r. I imported the mp3 into itunes and converted it to AAC than removed it from my library and went into itunes folder found it there and am wonder how to change the file extention i can only rename the file name no matter what i try the extention stays the same.
If someone can give a window user a walkthrough i would be so greatfull. My son is getting a Mac for Christmas i can wait I'll be on it more than him it looks like. LOL
Thanks again to anyone who can help me.:confused:

Never mind i figured it out just a simple thing in explore i forgot to do. Just incase someone else has a brain freeze like me go to view and folder options and and than view tab and uncheck show Hide extensions for known file types. Than you can simply change the file extention there. And i did what some else said convert the file to AAC than remove from library and i put it in a folder rename the extention than double clicked it and it was put into itunes but you can't find it in itunes anywhere even with a search. But if you go into explorer under itunes music there is a itunes folder there and the new ringtone is locate there. So maybe when they turn it on it will show up or maybe you have to buy one first for a playlist to show up.:)
 
3.1 MB in file size is the largest I can successfully transfer (so far) and have it work properly as a ringtone.

a 3.5 MB file would not work, but the 3.1 MB did just fine.
 
I think I may be a lil slow :(. I converted a file to AAC and then removed it from the iTunes library and placed it on my desktop. I then renamed the file so that .m4r followed the name and double-clicked it to open it up in iTunes. I go to the Ringtones tab and nothing is there still. Does simply renaming it convert it .m4r? I'm working on a PC and I don't know how to convert it if that is indeed not the way to do it. Thanks for any info!

TO CHANGE EXTENSIONS IN WINDOWS XP (YOU MUST FIRST DO THE FOLLOWING)

GO TO THE FOLDER WITH THE M4A FILE YOU WANT TO USE THEN GO TO "VIEW" AT THE TOP OF THE SCREEN ...CLICK ON "FOLDER OPTIONS"

viewfolderoptions.jpg


THEN CLICK ON "VIEW" AND MAKE SURE THE BOX THAT SAYS "HIDE EXTENSION FOR KNOWN FILE TYPES" IS UNCHECKED..NOW WHEN YOU RIGHTCLICK AND HIT RENAME ON THE FILE YOULL BE ABLE TO CHANGE THE EXTENSION TOO..MAKE SURE TO GO BACK AND CHECK THE BOX AFTERWARD... BECAUSE IF YOU ACCIDENTLY RENAME AND EXTENSION FOR A DLL OR EXE FILE YOU CAN CAUSE SERIOUS DAMAGE TO YOU COMPUTER OR RUIN FILES... HOPEFULLY THAT HELPS

folderoptionscopy.jpg
 
Sorry, I should have said... "I SYNCED and all my iToner ringtones vanished, but I discovered I could get ringtones in via iTunes, so I was even more excited..." I didn't consider that this might represent a bit of a shock to anyone, but then again... the next time you resynced iTunes, it would have happened anyway. And I doubt that the contact associations would even be fixed if they somehow got back on there, so... We knew this week would be very telling on "ringtone" hacking/updating.

~ CB

No, I understood you the first time, I knew the iToner ones would vanish, I just expected that your method would work, and when I posted the stuff you quoted it had not. But now it has. So, thank you, but make sure people know that you have to remove the original song from the iTunes library, not the duplicate, which won't show up in the library anyway if you already did it right. That's what caused the confusion.

Hey, any luck with ringtone videos?

Hey, for all you folks who argued with me for suggesting we be allowed to use something other than Apple's Authorized Ringtones, :p.
 
This is a post for the people that our having problems creating Ringtones with the updated iTunes (v 7.4). This is the way I am doing it. It is by no means the ONLY way, but it is a way that works for me as well as keep everything organized.

(1) Select your song. If you want to edit it (picking a particular starting and ending point) you can use the method described in earlier posts (see below) or with some free audio programs. I am on a MAC and like Audacity, but there are others.

(2) Create a folder titled "iPhone Ringtones" so you can keep track of all your Ringtones and come back to them if you need to. This also keeps all of your files neat and tidy and causes less confusion as to where your files are.

(3) If you are using the "itunes" method, select your original song in iTunes. Select "Get Info" in itunes. Click on the "Options" tab. Here you can increase the volume as well as select a starting and ending point for your song.

If you are using this method, you can skip step 4.

(4) If you are using an audio editing program, edit your song and then export as an AIFF or WAV file. Export the song to your "iPhone Ringtones" folder

(5) Open your exported song in iTunes. Select your song and right-click (if you don't have a right-click mouse, use control-click). Select "Convert Selection to AAC." This option is available to me because I have my settings under "Preferences/Advanced/Importing" to "Import Using AAC Encoder." Once it is done converting, right-click the converted song and select "Show in Finder." This will reveal where the song is located on your hard drive. Move the song to your designated "iPhone Ringtones folder" that I told you to create in step 2. If this is merely copying the file and not actually moving it, delete the original file if you don't want duplicates all over the place. Again, this keeps things nice and tidy.

(6) Delete the MP3 playlist file (the one you used BEFORE converting it to AAC) as well as the converted AAC playlist file from iTunes. This will keep iTunes from having several different directories for the same song, keeping things tidy and neat as well as keeping you from having a headache on keeping track of where everything is.

(7) Create a playlist on iTunes called "iPhone Ringtones." This is also for convenience sakes. It will help you have easy access to your Ringtones "playlist" and be the only place where iTunes keeps a directory of your Ringtones items (besides the Ringtones tab).

(8) In the finder, select the song you converted to AAC and press "Command-I" (or right-click and select "Get Info.") and IN THE GET INFO WINDOW (NOT the finder) change the extension of this file to "m4r" - IMPORTANT - Do NOT change the extension name in the finder. IT might appear as m4r in the name, but if you Get Info on this file, you will notice that the file now has TWO extension to it (i.e. "Start Me up.m4r.mr4") which REALLY confuses iTunes as well your iPhone.

**The song HAS to be in an AAC format FIRST before proceeding to renaming the extension. MP3s do NOT work. Repeat, MP3s do NOT work.

(9) Select your mp4 (lowercase works just fine) song and drag it into your "iPhone Ringtones" playlist in iTunes.

(10) Now sync up your iPhone, select the "Ringtones" tab. Select your songs and you should be good to go.

Hope this helps.


works like charm... i still hate music ringtones though... but Abba's Ring Ring is now in my possibilities.
 
I managed to get 2 ringtones that I used on my old phone through the entire process and they're showing up in my iphone, but neither of them work.

When I select them for a particular contact or action they play on the phone but when I get a call or alert it defaults to marimba. They still show up as selected, they just don't do anything.

I'm using windows vista, iPhone version is 1.0.2, both files are below 500k, one is 20 seconds long the other is 15. Any ideas?
 
It does not work for me. I did it step by step amd everything is correct, but the ringtone does not show up under the ringtone tab when I try to sync it. iTunes also didn't make a ringtone folder like it should.
 
It does not work for me. I did it step by step amd everything is correct, but the ringtone does not show up under the ringtone tab when I try to sync it. iTunes also didn't make a ringtone folder like it should.

What iphone software version are you using?
 
It's supposed to be "m4r" and also make sure you are changing the actual extension. Command-I to see the full filename with full extension.

arn

Thanks arn. That fixed my issue. Kept changing the extension but I really wasn't changing it at all. In info it was "song.m4r.mp4"
 
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