| Author |
Message |
mattdoyal
 Posts: 1 |
 Thu Apr 21, 2005 4:36 am |
Ok, seriously now, I have spent the last few hours trying to search for how to upload a .mmf file to my E315(t-mobile) and have got no where!
I uploaded my file to tagtag.com, setup my wap site, linked the file, but I get FORBIDDEN on my display when I try to download the file. Without using a data cable, does ANYONE have any other ideas??
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Braze
 Posts: 1
Phone Model: Samsung P735
Service Provider: T-Mobile |
 Wed Apr 27, 2005 1:28 am |
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I just made some for my friend who has an E315. They were all under 50Kb (one was 49.9!) and she was able to get them all. I get the FORBIDDEN message when I try to download a file that's too big.
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 sakaze
 Posts: 229
Phone Model: v200, s200, e710, mpx200, d500
Service Provider: t-mo cust serv. sucks a$$ |
 Wed Apr 27, 2005 11:09 am |
you can use infared and easy gprs to upload the files.
click here for easy gprs
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 basselin
 Posts: 2
Phone Model: Samsung E315
Service Provider: T-Mobile |
 Fri Jun 10, 2005 10:08 am |
Can I just upload to my own webserver and access the files directly? I tried and get file too big error (doing http://www.mysite.com/song.mmf)
Or do I need to do the wap site thing?
the file is only 17kb.
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 wilburx
 Posts: 2
Phone Model: Motorola v330
Service Provider: T-Mobile ToGo |
 Fri Jun 10, 2005 11:51 pm |
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I just got my e315 last week... it seems T-Mobile doesn't allow passing MMFs through T-zones or SMS(email), however MIDIs (50k for tzones and 100k for sms) are allowed. Just rename the .mmf file to a .mid file and email it to YOURPHONENUMBER@tmomail.com. The phone is smart enough to recognize its an mmf and not a midi.
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 basselin
 Posts: 2
Phone Model: Samsung E315
Service Provider: T-Mobile |
 Sat Jun 11, 2005 12:40 am |
Anything you're doing to make them sound better?
I've been saving from Wavelab (wav file) and using the yamaha wav --> smaf program, renaming to .mid, emailing, and they come out sounding pretty crappy.
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 wilburx
 Posts: 2
Phone Model: Motorola v330
Service Provider: T-Mobile ToGo |
 Sat Jun 11, 2005 2:14 pm |
I use Adobe Audition(Cool Edit Pro)--I'm not sure about Wavelab. In AA I save mono wave at the intended sample type. For a short clip, I might use 16bit/16,000hz and it sounds decent, but not great. For a longer one - 8bit/8000hz or 10,000hz and it sound good enough. AA by default adds noise shaping to 8bit files, and it sounded much better after I turned it off.
Also check how loud your wav files are, you might want to normalize them to -1db or -2db.
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