ohh cmon! another 23mb? man! y cant they just include everything in the service packs? well if ur not sure cud u please find out? anyone else.. can u help? is that really what i need?
converting mp3 to AAc?
i cant try it on any other of my pcs as they all have the framework installed....
i'm really sorry, I did in .net because I am learning it at the moment 😞
if anybody else has the answer......
I have created a homepage with some clearer instructions here:
What is the AAC quality bar in reference to,its not Kbps right?It would be a lot better if it was Kbps.There is a out.wav file left ofter conversion,maybe it should be automatically deleted.
Thanks for trying it GhostDog, much appreciated. I will change it so that it deletes the wave file.
as for the quality, I think it is FAAC's ABR setting so it isnt always perfect, but it should be reasonable. Dont want to give it an exact kbs as that would mean changing it to CBR which would decrease the quality.
Thanks again
Kevin
No problem,keep up the good work!
Hello,
only read this thread quite a good un will have to try the MP3 to AAC.
I happen to be a .NET programmer (I do VB.NET and ASP.NET). The .NET framework is included in SP2 for XP. But this is only definately in the full install version. It may be possible to do one of those minimum updates over the internet which doesn't include the .NET framework which could explain problems people are having. But machines here with the service pack now all have .NET on.
Hope this helps, cheers,
Nyx.
Every time i click on a track (click add track, then choose the file i want to add) in nokia audio manager it comes up with an error and closes. I have re installed pc suite over and over but again still no joy. I am trying to get some decent sounds onto my nokia 6670.
If its supporting MP3 tones then is it required to convert
:icon4:
conversion is required to reduce the size as AAC are smaller files than MP3s
SQueeZe wrote:I have created a homepage with some clearer instructions here:
I have used this to convert some mp3s but i find that a few of them will not play on my phone at all, but when i put them over as mp3's they are fine. I have deleted the tracks and converted them again but i still get the same error when trying to use them on my phone. I was putting them as ring tones, but it says ring tone format not accepted or whatever. But most of them are fine
Im in serious need 4 the mp3 to aac converter, Ive been downloading programs 4 how long now but still can't get it right please could u help me in getting your program
anyway to work ard the 1 sided sound output thingy?
fauji wrote:i've been converting mp3's to aac for my 7610 with db poweramp. i too have found it very unreliable. which free software will allow me to convert aac's reliably?
dBpowerAMP uses the old PsyTEL FastEnc as default AAC codec, but this beta version was never tested for low bitrates, it only works reliable for presets -normal and above (~160 kbps/stereo). If you go to the dBpowerAMP Codec central, you will find several AAC/MP4 codecs, among them FAAC which should work reliable for lower bitrates.
But the GUI implementation in dBpowerAMP does not offer all FAAC options available in the command line version, so you might want to try other GUIs that have implemented FAAC: foobar2000 with foo_faac.dll plugin (the best in my opinion), Winamp 5.0x (either with internal or external AAC plugin), winLAME (no MP4 support, only AAC, but very easy to use), GX::Transcoder (needs faac.exe, too), Speek's "Ivan & Menno" (simple, but very effective for batch encoding from WAV) or Multi frontend from the same developer (direct transcoding from MP3), XMPlay, CoolEdit, CDex and HeadAC3he.
You can find more information about the open source codecs FAAC and FAAD2 (decoder) on their homepage and on the Knowledge Base/Wiki pages about them, see also the Wiki page about software audio players for Windows (including converters).
i've also noticed that the aac's, when played on my 7610, do not allow the pause function. is anyone else experienceing this; the pause option becomes unselectable...?
Sorry, I don't have an answer for that.
By the way, is there a table or overview available somewhere which Series 60 phones (or any mobile phones) are able to play AAC and/or MP4 files, either through hardware or software support like the RealPlayer 10? I couldn't find it on this site either, but it would be very useful for interested users in my opinion.
I've been using dBpowerAMP Converter but as it seems its MP3 encoder is a trial version and after 30 days can not be used anymore. :frown:
I was using this application to set my mp3s to 40kbps, using 16000hz sampling but now it's not working anymore.
What do you suggest me to do?
SQueeZe wrote:I have created a homepage with some clearer instructions here:
Too Good
I just tried converting aac to my 7710.
Wht u are using to get Good Quality and Compact memory.
:con?
I've copied a couple of mp4 audio files to my phone. To explain for anyone who doesn't get it - the MPEG-4 standard is a set of rules for creating audio/video files. AAC and MP4 are a couple of formats that adhere to these rules (in fact MP4 is just an AAC raw audio file with a "wrapper"😉.
Anyway, I send an MPEG-4 Audio file to my 7610 and it plays fine. The problem is that Real One Player and Symbian treat it as a video and I therefore can't use it as a ringtone. Can anyone tell me if AAC's have this problem too or any way to make the phone recognise mp4 as video .
In case this doesn't make sense....
mp4 = video, audio, or both
m4a = audio
m4v = video (presumably - i'm not sure)
There's also m4p I think, an extension Apple invented to indicate that it was an M4A with Digital Rights Management.
Anyone... ? :con? :con? :con?
sferson wrote::con?I've copied a couple of mp4 audio files to my phone. To explain for anyone who doesn't get it - the MPEG-4 standard is a set of rules for creating audio/video files. AAC and MP4 are a couple of formats that adhere to these rules (in fact MP4 is just an AAC raw audio file with a "wrapper"😉.
Anyway, I send an MPEG-4 Audio file to my 7610 and it plays fine. The problem is that Real One Player and Symbian treat it as a video and I therefore can't use it as a ringtone. Can anyone tell me if AAC's have this problem too or any way to make the phone recognise mp4 as video .
In case this doesn't make sense....
mp4 = video, audio, or both
m4a = audio
m4v = video (presumably - i'm not sure)There's also m4p I think, an extension Apple invented to indicate that it was an M4A with Digital Rights Management.
Anyone... ? :con? :con? :con?
AAC files play fine on my 7610. I can even use them as ringtones.
You have to be careful when encoding aac files to play on the mobile - it seems to play BOTH MPEG4 and MPEG2 standard types but only in "Low Complexity" formats. (that's what seems to work for me - i've tried using various tools to convert but only some work, presumably because they all use different standards of AAC)
AAC is a better codec - in tests at 96k it sounds better than 128k. It also has a smaller filesize (typically reducing my MP3s by 40%).
Hello everyone?! I am neither N7610 nor N6230 user, but Nokia 6600 lover :redface: . Can anyone have any idea how to make my "soap" like 6600 to play AAC files? My effort for trying this are as follows:
Question 1.
Tried OggPlay V 1.6.2 installed, said to have AAC plugin and MP3 plugin as well. But after installed. I do not know where to find the AAC and MP3 plugins for this OggPlay application! Can anyone help on this?
Question 2.
Tried Helix Player V 1.00 installed, yet the official released notes said. The AAC feature was not INCLUDED... Any experts here that have made any modification to the Helix Player source codes, so that it can play AAC?
Question 3.
Is there any alternative way to play AAC other than just buying N6230 or N7610 or AAC playable mobile phones? Because, hehehe, i love my "soap" N6600 phone. :tongue:
fauna5 wrote:AAC is a better codec - in tests at 96k it sounds better than 128k. It also has a smaller filesize (typically reducing my MP3s by 40%).
If you're encoding at 96k AAC (assuming a constant bitrate) from 128k MP3s you'll save 25%. The k(bps) is the size of one second of your file so by multiplying this number by the length you get the file size, ergo the same file will be 96/128 = 3/4 times the the size of the original.
Interesting note about the AAC files though, I might try them since the M4A files didn't work so well on my 7610.
convert real audio to mp3 with the streambox ripper
download the streambox ripper at its new location at
http://www.streamboxripper.net/
Not sure about that last post - looks a wee bit dodgy.
The Cheetah Audio converter is one I downloaded to encode MP3s. It won't convert them to AAC's but it's a good converter if you have a load of WMA rubbish you want to turn into MP3s.
SQueeZe wrote:righty then, its here:http://www.bits.bris.ac.uk/kevin/MP3AACConv/MP3AACConv.zip
Its written in VB .NET so I'm afraid you will need the framework if you dont have it. I believe it comes with XP service pack 2. if you dont have it you can get it here:
http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/details.aspx?FamilyID=262D25E3-F589-4842-8157-034D1E7CF3A3&displaylang=enIts dead easy, just unzip the files and then run Nokia MP3 - AAC Converter.exe.
let me know of any bugs, suggestions etc etc.
Your efforts are truly appreciated, I spent many an hour looking for something as simple and smart as your tool. Thank you for all your efforts you deserve the recognition
Try to use Akram Audio Covverter for tranforming mpr into amr and etc.. it works 4 me!:icon14:
Great problem I also have the same one,:con? I thought someone must know the solution anyways anyone please send me the licsence for smartmovie my IMEI is
357952009406266
on my email
[SIZE="5"][email protected][/SIZE]
my site is
http://www.geocities.com/pyaara_shubham/
My Photo is given down in me2.jpg don't get confused my hair is pure black
Joy RingTone Converter - Save any part of your favorite mp3s to MMF, AMR, MIDI AAC ringtone
Website: http://www.joyringtone.com
Joy RingTone Converter enables you to create your own ringtones by converting your MP3, WAVE files and CD tracks to the most common Ringtone format, including MMF, AMR, MP3, MIDI, WIDI, WAV, AAC, 3GPand MP4. The contained CD Ripper extracts digital audio CD tracks to audio formats WAV and MP3 with excellent output quality and high ripping speed, and the MP3 Compressor can reduce the MP3 file size up to 30%-70%, save valuable space on your Mobile Phone.
There's also a batch conversion function for converting MP3 or WAV files to RingTones automatically!
I am using the Joy Ringtone Converter, google it:
Here...