Total Cash = $192.8 Billion (Down $14.2 Billion for the quarter from $207 Billion) Last Quarter Sales: iPhones = $29 Bil (vs $31.1 Bil a year ago quarter and $56 Bil la st quarter) iPads = $4.7 Bil (vs $4.9 Bil as year ago quarter and $6 Bil last quarter) Mac's = $5.4 Bil (vs $5.5 Bil a year ago quarter and $7.2 Bil last quarter) Wearables = $6.3 Bil (vs $5.1 Bil a year ago quarter and $10 Bil last quarter) Services = $13.3 Bil (vs $11.5 Bil a year ago quarter and $12.7 Bil last quarter) Links Mentioned in this Episode: Today's Sponsor - /tii Today's Sponsor - /tii ZecOps - iOS Mail exploit - Kinda iPhone SE2 unboxing Video iPhone SE Reviews iPhone SE 2 vs Android 5 other ways Apple can crush rivals Apple Services - Global iOS 13.5 Beta 3 iPhone 12 Rumors Kickstarter - Nucleus Powerhub Apple Q1 2020 Conference call Apple - Quarterly PDF Apps Mentioned in this Episode: Tii App Garageband Spectre. Just make sure that you have “Sync Tones” checked in the device info.Tii 0495 - iOS 13.5 Beta 3, iPhone SE and Apple Quarterly Report Give us a call - 20 Send us an email - Apple Q1 2020 (fiscal Q2) - Quarterly Report Summary: Rev = $58.3 Billion (vs $58 Billion a year ago quarter and $91.8 Billion last quarter) this was 9.2% higher than the street consensus. Your ringtone is now done! All that’s left is to sync your device with iTunes and the new ringtone will be copied over. Yes, this might be an extra step, but I don’t understand why Apple doesn’t make it a one-step process either.
There are lots of ways to get your song to be in the right spot for your tone.If you don’t it will be a lot harder to listen and edit your song for your ringtone. Drag the song into the gray area of GarageBand where it says “Drag Apple Loops here.” Try to get the song as close to the beginning of the other track, just so it’s easier to start editing.Browse for the song you want to make into a ringtone (if you just want to record something for your ringtone, then from the Track menu choose “New Track” and start recording).Click the media browser button in the lower right corner and then choose iTunes from the top menu.I like to start with the example ringtone just because the loop is right there and set to a good length. Open GarageBand and create a new ringtone project.I’m going to assume you’re hitting “Save” as you go. I recorded making a ringtone from start to finish (with the exception of syncing my iPhone) in this screencast.
The screenshot below points out the key parts: Click for larger image.
For this project there are a few key things you’ll need to know how to get to. GarageBand’s interface hasn’t changed in a long while, I think it works pretty well actually. In the end the only limit is your creativity. I’ll be using music from my own iTunes library for the example, but as far as GarageBand is concerned, you can use any audio clip you want to make a ringtone. For ringtones (like for FaceTime or calls) the ringtone can be up to 40 seconds long, for alert tones the max is 30 seconds.įor the tools part, we’re going to use GarageBand v 6.0.5 from iLife ’11. Why not just make your own? If you have the song in iTunes (or just want to record something through the mic), Garageband, and five minutes you can make your own personalized ringtones for all your iDevices.įirst thing you need to know is that a ringtone or alert tone, at least as far as your iPhone or iPad is concerned, is just an MP3 or AAC file of a particular length that is (essentially) tagged as a ringtone in iTunes. I’ve never really understood why ringtones are such big business.