To be replaced with any ring tone Products stored on such other Products stored on such iPhone to be erased and, if you so choose, IPhone with another Apple-authorized device will cause any ring tone Single Apple-authorized device at a time, and that synching an Provided that each iPhone may sync ring tone Products with only a (iv) You shall be able to store Products from up to five differentĪccounts on certain devices, such as an iPod or iPhone, at a time The iTunes Store Terms of Service changed today to accommodate ringtones. Works equally well with AAC files ripped from CDs and “iTunes Plus” files purchased from iTunes. Or, far easier, just use Rogue Amoeba’s new freeware MakeiPhoneRingtone utility, which automates the above steps. Just use the trick where you make a copy of an AAC audio file and change its extension to “.m4r”, open it in iTunes, then change the file extension back to “.m4a” and sync your iPhone. (But the Show in Finder menu command works.) Are iTunes Plus Non-DRM Songs Freely Ringtone-Able Using the Unofficial File Extension Renaming Trick? What’s interesting about this checkbox is that it appeared out of the blue today it wasn’t visible in iTunes 7.4.1 until after the iTunes Store turned on ringtone support.Īlso: You can’t drag ringtones out of the Ringtones library in the main iTunes window. There’s a checkbox in the iTunes preferences dialog that controls whether the Ringtones sub-library appears in the list. Now that ringtones are available from the iTunes Store, iTunes offers an additional top-of-the-source-list sub-library named “Ringtones”: The Ringtone Sub-Library Source List Preference Perhaps whoever wrote the copy for this dialog was simply too ashamed to spell it out: iTunes will not allow you to use any non-iTunes Store audio file with its built-in Create Ringtone feature. ITunes: You can turn some of those songs over there into ringtones. User: I’d like to turn this song right here into a ringtone. It’s like a politician who’s asked a pointed question about topic A, and responds with a non sequitur talking point regarding topic B. Think about how weaselly this wording is. More absurd is the error dialog iTunes displays when you invoke the Create Ringtone command on a track that wasn’t purchased from iTunes, like, say, any MP3 or AAC file ripped from a CD: “Can no longer be made into a ringtone”? Anyway, obviously the Create Ringtone command should only be enabled when you’ve selected ringtone-able songs you shouldn’t have to invoke the command to find out if it’s ringtone-able, and, at least for me, you can’t trust the ringtone icons in the track listings. With other not-marked-as-ringtone-able tracks purchased from the iTunes Store, however, you get an error message as soon as you select them and choose Create Ringtone: (After synching my iPhone, it appeared and works just fine in the phone’s ringtone list.) The ringtone waveform selection tool appeared at the bottom of the window, I chose a 15-second clip, clicked Buy, and just like that, created and paid for a ringtone from a song that didn’t have the “you can turn this into a ringtone” marker in either my library or the iTunes Store. In the iTunes Store, however, the album shows four ringtone-able tracks: “Jesus, Etc.”, “Pot Kettle Black”, “Ashes of American Flags”, and “Radio Cure”.Ĭurious, I went back to my iTunes library and control-clicked on a supposedly non-ringtone-able track from that album, “Kamera”. I tried it on my wife’s system, and it worked just fine, displaying the ringtone icon next to many of the same tracks I have in my library.įor example, in my iTunes library, Wilco’s Yankee Hotel Foxtrot is listed with zero ringtone icons. After turning on the new Ringtones column in iTunes’s View Options dialog, not one of the nearly 300 songs I’ve purchased from the iTunes Store was listed as being ringtone-able. Don’t blame us, blame the dopes at the music labels.īut, anyway, the feature didn’t work. Trust us, we’d love to sell them all to you as ringtones. Which, reading between the lines, seems to translate to: Look, we know it sucks that only some of the songs in the iTunes Store are available as ringtones. When I first launched iTunes today, I was prompted with this dialog box: Ways in Which iTunes’s Just-Released Official Ringtone Support Is Weird, Rude, and/or Just Plain Buggy Wednesday, 12 September 2007 Determining Which Songs Are Ringtone-Able
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