If your phone has the SD chip, then you can just copy your MP3's directly onto the card. You can just set the full songs as a ringtone.
If you're looking for shorter ringtones, then what I do is use a wav editing program like Coolwave or my favorite Goldwave (goldwave.com). I just highlight about 30 secs or so of a song and save it as a 30 second mp3 file. Ringtones are not a special format that you need to convert to. A ringtone can be a .mid file (Poly ringtones), .Wav (voice ringtones) or .mp3 (Voice/full music ringtones).
Your MicroSD chip should have a sort of a docking station, so to speak. You stick the chip inside the holder and then the USB cable plugs into the holder (and allows you to access the SD chip). Once you have a connection, you should start seeing a Found New Hardware thing on your computer. Once thats done, then you should be able to open My Computer and see a new hard drive labled (Removable Disk). It will probably be E, F, or G: drive that you see (depends on how many hard drives and CD drives you have on your computer. I have 2 hard drives and 2 DVD burners, so it appears a G:\ on my system. Now you can just copy and paste any MP3's you have on your computer, to that drive.
This is the same way my Mp3 player (not iPod, but a generic 50.00 kind) works. They also use the MicroSD chips as well as USB thumb/flash drives. They are all the same thing and they all appear as a removeable drive on your computer when you plug it in.
Actually, there should have also been a program that came with your mp3 player cellphone to do the copying, but if u dont, then do it the way I said above.
2007-01-12 13:32:47
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answer #1
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answered by SharpGuy 6
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3gforfree.com you pay 7$ a years subscription and your set to go.
2007-01-12 21:35:13
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answer #2
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answered by confusedstocker 2
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