When the first cell phones rolled into the market in the 1990's,
nobody ever expected that those clunky black boxes with their
electronic shrills would develop into sleek, powerful machines that
could (aside from sending and receiving calls) take a picture, make
a video, and sing.
Yes, sing. Today's ring tones have the audio quality equal to
the sounds we hear in real life. Say goodbye to the monophonic ring
tones and its R2D2-like beeps and whistles. And even the polyphonic
ring tones sound too sharp for our tastes, more like a music box
than, well, music. Now, the standard for ring tones is real
tones--as melodic and realistic as the songs on the radio (or the
sounds of the farm, depending on which real tone you want).
Real tones are also called true tones, voice tones and name
tones. But, to borrow a phrase from Shakespeare, "A tone by any
other name would sound as sweet." The popularity of real tones has
reached a point that it's actually formed a large chunk of the
profits of the cell phone industry.
While there are many sites that provide real tones for free
(preferring to get their earnings from clicks, ads or links) many
mobile phone users actually don't mind paying good money for a song
that they like.
Just look at the industry reports. A staggering 60% of the total
revenues from the mobile phone ring tone industry are from real
tones. They are clearly outselling monophonic ring tones and
polyphonic ring tones, which only from 33% of the revenues
combined. The remaining seven percent of the total revenues were
generated from the download of call-back tones.
That means over half of the millions of cell phone users are
"keeping it real". People are addicted to real tones, and will
continue downloading tones even if their phones already packed with
a list of songs that would make a DJ proud. In fact, even if cell
phones are already programmed with its own generic set of ring
tones, most prefer to replace them with real tones that they love.
It's part of the whole appeal of being able to personalize your
phone. Find here free mp3 ringtones
without subscription.
There are hundreds of thousands of real tones available on the
web. The most popular are from the songs of pop artists like Gwen
Stefani, Destiny's Child. Of course, it all depends on who's
leading the pop charts. Gwen Stefani's Hollaback Girl, Cater 2 U by
Destiny's Child, and We Belong Together by Mariah Carey were all
big hits in 2005, so it's not surprising that people want to play
them on their phones.
Next to pop, the most popular real tones are from Rap, Hip Hop
and Punk.All in all, about 76% of real tone revenues are from
actual songs. Studies show that there's a relationship between the
songs that are downloaded for iPods and the songs downloaded for
real tones. Generally, a music fan will want to have both on his
gadgets--one to listen to, and an excerpt to play on the phone.
However, there are other types of real tones as well. Around 11%
of the revenues in real tones were actually voice tones:
celebrities saying hi, excerpts from movies.
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