Transfering songs to Sony Ericsson..need help

Discussion in 'Science, Technology & Car Chat' started by lumines, Oct 9, 2006.

  1. lumines

    lumines Active Member

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    ok so i got an SE k800, i want to transfer the songs to the phone but i dont have windows service pack so i cannot install the program that sony gave me on the CD to transfer the songs. I cant install service pack either. So is there an alternative program or another way to transfer files between my phone and files?
     
  2. loup

    loup Active Member

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    Hi,

    Have you tried via Bluetooth?
    You can also try FMA, one of the best application for SE mobile phones: http://fma.sourceforge.net/
     
  3. lumines

    lumines Active Member

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    bluetooth with my phone and computeR?...how do i do that? lol
     
  4. dim8sum

    dim8sum ♫♪♫♪♫♪♫♪♫♪♫♪....

    if ur phone has a memory card you can get a memory card reader and plug that into ur pc and plug ur mem card into that. Then find the appropriate folder (where the phone keeps ur music files) and copy ur music over.

    alternatively, you can do it over bluetooth. Get a bluetooth dongle, install on ur pc and you should get an option to send fiel to bluetooth device. Turn on bluetooth on ur phone and send the file, connect to ur phone and accept the file
     
  5. ccho19

    ccho19 Active Member

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    I think use bluetooth is the fastest way to transfer songs. I got a SE W850i. I transfer games, songs and theme using bluetooth.
     
  6. GarryKasparov

    GarryKasparov Well-Known Member

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    Sony Ericsson

    The K800i's music player lets you organize music by artist, track name, or playlist and choose from settings that include album/song shuffle and loop, stereo widening, and an equalizer. Music stops automatically when you get a call, you can minimize the player's interface, and an airplane mode lets you listen to your tunes in flight with the cell phone turned off. There are stereo speakers on the back and the phone supports a Bluetooth profile. Music capacity is limited by the available memory, so again buying a Memory Stick Micro is a good idea. To get music on the phone, you can use an included USB cable or send tunes via Bluetooth or the infrared port. You also get the Sony Ericsson FM radio with 20 presets, though you must use it with a headset, which acts as an antenna.
     
  7. GarryKasparov

    GarryKasparov Well-Known Member

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    Sony Ericsson W800

    The interface for the Sony Ericsson W800i's MP3 and AAC music player is spartan, but it's extremely user-friendly. Opening the player takes you directly to the main menu, where you can organize music by artist, track name, or playlist. To navigate through the player, you use the joystick while choosing between the left soft key and the side-mounted play/pause button to control songs. Settings include album/song shuffle and loop, Sony's Mega Bass, and an equalizer. Unlike the iTunes interface on the Motorola Rokr E1, the W800i doesn't display album art when a song is playing. Switching between the cell phone and the music player is seamless, as music automatically stops when you receive a call. Hang up and press the dedicated music key, and your song picks up again from the same point you left off. There's also an airplane mode that lets you listen to your tunes in flight with the cell phone turned off.

    You must download music from a PC with the included USB cable and Disc2Phone software. Music capacity isn't restricted to the number of songs but instead is limited by the available memory. Integrated shared storage is only 38MB, but you get an included 512MB Memory Stick Duo card. Even more impressive, the phone accepts Memory Stick Pro Duo cards up to 2GB, the trade-off being that you can use Sony's proprietary Memory Stick cards only. You can also use tracks as ring tones (tracks are conveniently listed in the ring-tones folder), and you can send tunes via e-mail, multimedia message, Bluetooth, or infrared port. You even get an FM radio that automatically scans and programs up to 20 presets and grabs Radio Data System info from stations that digitally broadcast their names and call letters. The only real catch is that you can't listen to music through Bluetooth headphones.