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Need to Convert .wav to .aac

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Stoic Joker:
Last freeware version: http://www.xup.in/dl,19058805/XRecode_I_final_2.6.0.zip/
-wr975 (June 13, 2010, 05:59 AM)
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Thanks folks, this one took care of it just fine (and on Win7 x64). Only hiccup was that converting from .wav to .aac directly destroyed the file (without error). But converting from .wav to .mp3 then to .aac worked fine.

So now when my phone rings, it sounds like (I think it should) a phone ringing not a spaceship, symphony, TV commercial, or zoo trip. :)

I even created a silent ringtone that I can assign to "Special" people that I wish to auto-magically ignore (hehe).

wr975:
I like the idea with the silent ring tone... clever!  ;D

FWIW, here're my three most-used ring tones:
http://www.xup.in/dl,90982961/standard.ring.tone.mp3/
http://www.xup.in/dl,44740596/standard.ring.tone.2.mp3/
http://www.xup.in/dl,76166824/dont.miss.important.mp3/

scancode:
http://www.xup.in/dl,90982961/standard.ring.tone.mp3/
-wr975 (June 13, 2010, 12:38 PM)
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Why can't we be friends?

cranioscopical:
super can do almost anything.. but it's so confusing to use i would leave it as a lost resort :)-mouser (June 12, 2010, 10:20 PM)
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surely you meant as a last resort! :)
-lanux128 (June 13, 2010, 02:15 AM)
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Or at a lost resort… Club Atlantis, for example.

Renegade:

...But converting from .wav to .mp3 then to .aac worked fine.

-Stoic Joker (June 13, 2010, 11:04 AM)
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You should avoid  converting like that (WAV > MP3 > AAC). Both MP3 and AAC are lossy formats, so you lose quality every time you encode a new file. Use something like WAV > FLAC > AAC as you will not lose quality there. Or better yet, just use FLAC. :)

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