Nametones – The New Definition of the Latest Mobile Phone

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At first it’s monophonic ringtones, then polyphonic ringtones, then realtones, and now it’s public domain names. Monophonic ringtones are capable of producing only one melodic note at a time. A polyphonic ringtone plays multiple instruments from a MIDI file at the same time, making the ringtone sound like music. Realtones, technically speaking, are mp3 songs or songs in some other format.

Very often people get confused between real ringtones and polyphonic ringtones. The difference between real and polyphonic ringtones is that polyphonic ringtones are .midi files and realtones are .mp3 or other music format. So, with Midi files, users are able to hear beeps just like polyphonic and monophonic ringtones do. While MP3 files are compressed songs; so that phone users hear the real song from the radio but only a shorter version.

Beyond these real stones, now you have names. As the name suggests, it’s like an actual tone with your name in it. Domain names are the last essentials for your mobile phone. They are cool, trendy and a lot of fun. You hear your name as a cool ringtone when someone calls you; something like “Peter, you’ve got ringing tones, pick it up before it’s too late.” or “Hey Pete your cell phone rings, pick it up!”

You would find that domain names are of a different style. There are pop domain names, bubblin names, hardcore names, R & B names and much more in the chart like this. Wait till you get too excited and run for names, it will work when your phone supports realtones.

So if you look at the past when monophonic ringtones were a huge hype in the mobile entertainment industry, and later polyphonic ringtones got huge. Real tones and names will likely be the next big hype in mobile entertainment.

Now service providers provide personalized mobile music name names. There is Singing Nametone, Love Nametone:

Your partner listens when he gets a call eg Jenny, honey, oh please pick up the phone. And there is the caller tone: the phone sings the contact’s name when it calls, for example Christine is calling.

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Source by Gian Bryan

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