Originally posted by: Heisenberg
I would think so. One of the "rings" on my T720 is a woman's voice saying I have a call. Sounds just like a recording. The hard part would be converting it to the right format and then getting it on the phone.
Okay, so it's the not-so-hard part then.Originally posted by: sobriquet
Originally posted by: Heisenberg
I would think so. One of the "rings" on my T720 is a woman's voice saying I have a call. Sounds just like a recording. The hard part would be converting it to the right format and then getting it on the phone.
That information is readily available on the net. For instance, Sprint's qcp files need to be PCM 8.000 kHz, 16 Bit, Mono. Then there's a simple matter of using a program from Qualcomm (PureVoice Converter) to convert from wav to qcp.
Originally posted by: vegetation
My Nokia 3650 uses regular wav files as ring tones, as do most newer quality phones I assume.
Originally posted by: DivideBYZero
Originally posted by: vegetation
My Nokia 3650 uses regular wav files as ring tones, as do most newer quality phones I assume.
3650 is a clowns phone.
Originally posted by: vegetation
My Nokia 3650 uses regular wav files as ring tones, as do most newer quality phones I assume.
Originally posted by: vegetation
My Nokia 3650 uses regular wav files as ring tones, as do most newer quality phones I assume.
3650 is a clowns phone.