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How to set ringtones on itunes?

1. Open iTunes and import the songs you want to set as ringtones into the software.

Click File-Add File to Library-Select Song-OK to open-You can see that the selected song is already in the library on the page.

2. In this way, you can make ringtones. Right-click and select Show Info. In the page that appears, click "Options" to set the start and end time for making ringtones. Click "OK" to finish music interception. (Apple's ringtone should be within 40 seconds)

3. Now it is necessary to convert the format of the music that has been made.

Select Song-File-Convert-Create AAC Version-Click OK to see songs with the same name but different times appear in the database.

4. At this time, the song just changed its format, but it still doesn't apply to Apple phones.

Select the song-right click-display in Windows Explorer-change the suffix extension "m4a" of the song name to "m4r" format-OK.

5. Connect the Apple phone to the computer, change the column of "Music" to "Ringtone"-file-add the file to the database-and you can see that there will be songs on the ringtone page.

6. Click the phone style icon behind the ringtone-click the ringtone option in the phone-select the synchronous ringtone-and then turn on the ringtone in the phone settings to see the favorite songs displayed.

Extended data

File format support

At present, ITunes 9 can read, write and convert between MP3, AIFF, WAV, MPEG-4, AAC and Apple Loss.

ITunes can also play anything that QuickTime can play (even some video formats), including protected AAC files in iTunes Store and Audible.com audiobooks. In order to play other formats, such as playing Vorbis or Speex encoding with Ogg, iTunes needs to install Xiph QuickTime component.

There are some comments on the quality of Apple's MP3 encoder with variable bit rate. On June 5438+ 10, 2004, Roberto Amorim led the public audition test of six kinds of MP3 encoders at the speed of 128 kbit/s, and the iTunes MP3 VBR encoder ranked last. The leader later confirmed how iTunes was tested with serious problems.

Windows version of iTunes can automatically convert unprotected WMA files (including version 9) into other audio formats, but it does not support WMA formats that are directly played or compiled.

References:

Baidu encyclopedia: iTunes