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Tutorial: How to Use MP3s as Ringtones on Motorola Q Smartphone
     
     

Selling mobile phone ringtones is a pretty good racket.  Extract a twenty or thirty-second clip from a four minute song, sell it for three times the price of the full song, and make it so the ringtone expires in three months and has to be purchased again.  One wonders how the people who dream up these schemes sleep at night.

Luckily, if you own the right phone (or use the right software), you can bypass all of this ridiculousness and use your own MP3 audio files as ringtones.  One of the phones that makes this easy is the Motorola Q.

In this tutorial, we'll show you how to use your existing MP3 audio files as Motorola Q ringtones in three easy steps.  All you need is the USB connection cable that came with your Motorola Q, an MP3 audio file and a few minutes.

 

Step 1: Know Your Folders

The Motorola Q smartphone runs the Windows Mobile 5 operating system, which employs the same basic folder structure as the version of Windows that runs on your PC. The first step in using an MP3 as a ringtone is to locate the folder where ringtone files are stored on the Q. 

Connect your Motorola Q to your Windows PC.  Allow ActiveSync to complete the sync process.  On the ActiveSync toolbar, click the Explore button:

The ActiveSync Explore feature allows you to view the files stored on your Windows Mobile device with your Windows PC...

 

ActiveSync's Explore feature allows you to browse the files stored on your mobile device, which in this case is the Motorola Q.  Navigate to the My Windows Mobile-Based Device > Application Data > Sounds folder.  This is the folder in which MP3 audio files must be stored in order to be used as ringtones.

MP3 files used as ringtones on your Motorola Q must be stored in the Sounds folder...

You'll need this folder for Step 2, so keep it open or minimize it to your Windows Taskbar.

 

Step 2: Moving MP3 Files to the Sounds Folder

Next, you have to locate the MP3 audio file you wish to transfer to the Q.  Our audio file file, Ram Jam's "Black Betty," is on our Windows Desktop.  This is an easy place to store the MP3 file that's waiting to be moved to the Motorola Q.  Once you've found your MP3 file, with the Sounds folder window still open, drag and drop the file to the Sounds folder using your mouse:

Drag & Drop the file you want to transfer to your Motorola Q...

 

The file will then be copied to your Motorola Q.  Wait for the transfer to complete:

Allow the file to transfer...

 

Step 3: Use the MP3 File as a Ringtone

Now that you've copied the MP3 file to your Motorola Q, it's time to setup the Q's software to use the MP3 file as a ringtone.  On your Q's Today Screen, open the Start Menu and navigate to Settings:

   

In the Settings menu, select Sounds.  The first drop-down menu should contain your currently-selected ringtone.  Open the drop-down menu and you should see your new ringtone:

 

   

Select the new ringtone, tap Done and Done again.  Your new MP3 ringtone is now ready for your first incoming call.

 

Final Thoughts

While MP3 files may all seem alike, there are different ways of encoding MP3s which result in different bitrates.  To minimize possible problems, limit your MP3 files' bitrate to 128kpbs.

If you don't want to transfer an entire MP3 file to your Motorola Q, you can download software to your Windows PC which will allow you to clip an MP3 file to take up less space on your smartphone.  One free application available for clipping your MP3 files is AudioBlast, which can be downloaded here.

  
     
 
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