onsdag den 9. juli 2008

Wallpaper Pack vol. 3


More than 200 different images, for wallpaper for your mobile phone. The last of 3 Wallpaper packs.
Get it from Rapidshare:
http://rapidshare.com/files/128098168/176x220_wallpaper_pack_3.rar

Wallpaper Pack vol. 2


More than 200 different images, for wallpaper for your mobile phone. The second of 3 Wallpaper packs.
Get it from Rapidshare:
http://rapidshare.com/files/128097963/176x220_wallpaper_pack_2.rar

tirsdag den 8. juli 2008

Wallpaper Pack


More than 200 different images, for wallpaper for your mobile phone. The first of 3 Wallpaper packs.
Get it from Rapidshare:
http://rapidshare.com/files/128097602/176x220_wallpaper_pack_1.rar

torsdag den 3. juli 2008

Cheap and easy way to make wallpapers


This is a cheap and easy way to make wallpapers and images for your cellphone.
Find or make the image you want on your computer. Then either print it out and take a picture
with your phone, or take it straight fromthe screen.
Hope you wil find this tip usefull. i have made some real nice images that way.

How You Can Personalize Your Cell Phone With the Help of Ringtones

Everyone is surprised with the growing popularity ringtones. Every cell phone user is finding new ways of personalizing cell phones. It is not an easy task to give an individual touch to a cell phone. One of the ways of personalizing cell phone is downloading latest melodies. Latest melodies is a great way of grabbing the attention of the people around you.
Latest ringtones are beneficial in many ways. They help you in not missing a single phone call. Nowadays you can find a wide variety of ringtones in the market. Cell phone melodies are based on latest movies as well new and old songs. Some years ago many almost every one was using monotonous ringtones. Even today you can find these ringtones in the old models of Nokia and Motorola. Monotonous tones are very simple and can be created with the help of a cell phone. If you like more realistic sounds then it is a good idea to opt for polyphonic melodies. It is not difficult to find these type of melodies. They are available all over the internet. They are usually downloaded in MIDI format.
I am sure that you have heard about the newest type of ringtones that are MP3 melodies. MP3 tones means true sounds. It is a good idea to convert your favorite song into MP3 format and play is as a ringtone.
There are various reasons behind fast growth of the ringtone industry all over the World. Websites are making good money by giving free access to melodies, wallpapers and other mobile phone related stuff. By providing free melodies websites are generating lot of human traffic. Bigger traffic means better income. Webmasters make money not through the free stuff but through the advertisements which are placed on the web pages. Some companies are making money even by selling cell phone related stuff.
A tone is installed in a phone with the help of computing technology. There is specific coding method with the help of which a cell phone tone is created. This coding language is known as RTTTL. This coding language developed by one of the famous cell phone manufacturing company that is Nokia. RTTTL means Ringing Tone Text Transfer Language.
Thanks to the advanced technology that we can take the advantage of latest melodies and other stuff related to mobile phones. Inventors are doing their best to provide latest features with mobile phones.
There are several things which you should consider while downloading something from internet. You should spend some time in finding the proper website. The website should be secure and certified. The company should not ask you anything in place of free tones and melodies.
If everything is ok then you should click the download now button. The ringtone will be stored in your computer after you have downloaded it.
Installing a melody in your phone is very easy. There are many websites which give guidelines for installing melodies in a cell phone. It is a good idea to go through these instructions before starting anything. Finding a right tone is a bit difficult task but it will easier for you if you will follow the instructions which I have stated above.
If you want to know more about Ring Tones then it is a good idea to visit Free Ringtones.

Make Your Own Ringtones


With MYO Ringtones you make unlimited personal ringtones from your own music collection. There is no limit to the ringtones you can create from your mp3, wma, aac, wav, ogg files or from your CD collection. 3 easy steps: select the song you want to edit, choose the section you want as a ringtone then download to your mobile phone. Download it directly to your phone via your phone's internet (WAP) OR download to your computer and then upload to your phone via cable, bluetooth or infrared. You can check & test phone compatibility before you buy. MYO Ringtones works on more than 700 phones globally (such as: Nokia, Moto, Samsung, SonyE, Siemens, LG, Sanyo, Sendo, Sharp, Panasonic, Sagem, Palm & many more) - it should work on any truetone ringtone compatible phone. Once you buy the license, we will not charge you anything else. MYOR is an unlimited ringtone creator that allows you to make ringtones for your and also for your friends phones. It is not locked to any one phone number.

Audio Blogger

Audio Blogger is a voice blogging application for your cellphone where you can post your voice messages to any blog. It is also good for myspace posts as well. There are no known requirements and should be good for any cellphone.

Is it illegal to make your own ringtones?

The answer is No, it’s is not illegal to make your own ringtones. If you own a CD music, you can rip that and make it as your phone’s ringtone.
However, services like the Apple iTunes Store would charge another $0.99 for you to be able to use any of your already-purchased songs and make them into ringtones because the RIAA told them so. That’s basically it. In the case of the iPhone, the iTunes EULA prohibits downloading music into your iPhone and using it as ringtones because of Apple’s agreement with them.Makes sense huh?

Free Ringtone Maker

Make polyphonic ringtones for your mobile phone for free. All done by midi, then simply send them to your phone.
Find more info on:
http://www.bimtones.com

Make MP3 Ringtones for Free

Check this site out with a tool on how to convert your MP3 songs into ringtones for free.
You need to have an existing mp3 song wiht you and you can upload up to a maximum of 6MB file. Make sure you also have Flash Player installed.
Find more info on:
http://www.mytinyphone.com/p/make-ringtone/

onsdag den 2. juli 2008

Personalize your Phone with tonethis


A great little free program, where you
can make your own ringtones from cds and mp3.
Personalize your wallpapers videos. Download
Free games and content and 1000s of free independent
music, videos and images.

You can even build tonethis into your myspace or blog
There is no end to the posibilities

Find more info on http://www.tonethis.com/

RingtoneExpress

A personalized ringtone is worth a thousand preset tones. It's no wonder why so many users produce their own, and why so many developers join the talent show. While all ringtone-making software share some commonalities, they usually vary by some degree of pricing, audio editing sensitivity, and delivery mode. RingtoneExpress, for instance, is light on editing tools, but offers four methods for loading MP3 and WMA content onto the phone. The pricing is kept low, about $10 for limitless ringtone creation, and uniquely, it can also suck the audio out of YouTube videos for conversion to an MP3 ringtone.

Ringtones go to the dogs in Japan


Love dogs. Love the Japanese even more for their highly bizarre gizmos. No other country has consistently amused and amazed the world with its weird and wacked-out inventions. Try topping this latest idea: Ringtones audible only to dogs, from Tokyo-based interactive content provider Dwango (PDF in Japanese).
Lest you think it's an error in translation, Dwango describes the download service very clearly as Inu ni shika kikoenai chakushinon--which translates to "Ringtones only dogs can hear," according to CrunchGear. But since this is available specifically for DoCoMo's i-mode phones, only Japanese dogs need apply.
(Source: Crave Asia)

Turns out we all want to pay *more* for ringtones?


Makers, are you OK with paying more money for ringtone than you would for a complete song? These folks seem to think so - "According to The NPD Group, a leading provider of consumer and retail information, consumers are willing to pay more for a 30-second snippet of a song track to be used as a ringtone than to download an entire song track. In addition, consumers are willing to pay a premium (above the average $0.99 price for paid music downloads from the Web) for the convenience of downloading a full song directly to their mobile phone wherever and whenever they want." Link. Wouldn't it be better to buy the song, then make your own?

Stop paying for ring tones


It's no secret that cell phones can now alert you to incoming calls with a musical ring tone. I applaud this development: Songs sound better than beeps, and they're personal.
There is a catch, however. Buying ring tones can be expensive. Online stores typically charge more to send a song snippet to your cell phone than they do to download a whole song to your PC. Ring-tone sellers tend to tout compatibility they can't back up. Even if they sell you one that works on your phone and deliver it to you successfully, you'll still have to pony up more cash every time you want to switch your ring tone. And if you buy a new phone, you may not be able to use the ring tones you've purchased and loaded onto your old one.
Record labels love it when fans buy a ring tone of a song they already own -- the industry claims $4 billion in ring-tone sales to date. But in fairness, you shouldn't have to pay separately just to hear your CD tracks or legally acquired MP3s as ring tones.
In most cases, you don't have to. Putting a snippet of a CD track or MP3 file on your phone is actually very straightforward -- not to mention free, if you already own the song. Following is a step-by-step guide.What you need
Cell phone with MP3 ring-tone support
CD or MP3 of the song
Any method of transferring the ring tone from computer to phone (USB, Bluetooth, e-mail, instant message, etc.)

Audio-editing software that allows export to MP3. If you don't already have this, Audacity is a good open-source program you can download for free, and is available for Windows, Mac and Linux. You'll also need the LAME library for Windows, Mac or Linux. (LAME is a free downloadable MP3 codec that enables Audacity to encode to MP3.)
About 20 minutes Instructions
If you're creating your ring tone from a CD, rip the song you want as a WAV (Windows) or an AIFF file (Mac). Using iTunes, specify this type of ripping in File/Preferences/Advanced/Importing. It's a good idea to specify a new ripping location, too, so the ripped song doesn't end up lost in the rest of your collection. In iTunes, set the "rip to" folder in File/Preferences/Advanced/General.
If you're creating your ring tone from an MP3, just copy that MP3 into a new folder so that your ring-tone editing won't affect the version of the song in your digital music collection.
Once you have the song as a digital music file (whether WAV, AIFF or MP3), run your audio-editing software. I highly recommend Audacity for this task. It's free, it's open-source, it runs on all major platforms, it rocks. If you don't plan to use it, skip the rest of this tutorial and consult your software documentation.
Audacity converts -- read on!
Before Audacity can export audio to the MP3 format your cell phone wants in a ring tone, you'll need to download the LAME library. Lame is open-source MP3 audio-compression software that rates among the best anywhere for recording fidelity. It also claims a legal exemption from MP3 patent royalties, meaning it's free, for now at least. Find the link for your operating system listed above on this page, and download LAME to a new folder on your computer (it will need to stay there for Audacity to access it for MP3 encoding).
Run Audacity, go to the Audacity/Preferences menu, and click the Find Library button near the bottom of the screen. Navigate to the LAME Library on your hard drive, and select it. I recommend setting your bit rate to 128 Kbps. You can choose a lower bit rate to save space on your phone, but you'll get lower-quality sound.
In Audacity's File menu, select Open and find the song you ripped for your ring tone.
You'll see your song laid out from left to right. Click the cursor around until you find the section you want for your ring tone. You're looking for a phrase of 10 to 15 seconds or so. Take a few passes at highlighting your future ring tone. Press the space bar to preview the selections. When you find the right one, you can export it as is -- or you can personalize the ring tone with audio effects.
Audacity comes with several effects; to try them out, leave the ring tone selected in the Audacity window, and then select anything in the Effect menu.
I recommend trying the Echo and Phaser. Each has various settings to tweak. Adding these effects is a matter of taste, but I figure it adds a bit of spice to the ring tone and makes it more of an individual statement.
Creating a derivative work of a copyright song is technically illegal. I'm no lawyer, and this does not constitute legal advice, but I am fairly certain that one could successfully defend these highly unlikely charges on the grounds that creating -- and not distributing -- a ring tone from a legally purchased song is covered by the affirmative defense of fair use.
After you're happy with whatever effects you've decided to use (the Edit/Undo function often comes in handy here), leave the ring tone selected in Audacity and choose File/Export Selection as MP3.
It's time to transfer the MP3 ring tone onto your phone. The easiest way to do this is with Bluetooth, assuming you have already paired your computer and cell phone. If your phone came with a USB connection, use that; otherwise, try e-mailing or texting it as an attachment. Put the ring-tone file into the Audio folder if your phone has one, and then select the new ring tone in your Tools or Options menu.