Why do people search AAC to M4R and still fail to see the tone under iPhone ringtone lists?
M4R is not a secret codec—it is a short AAC-in-MP4 slice flagged for the ringtone pipeline. The painful part is rarely FFmpeg; it is juggling Finder permissions, Apple ID prompts, and stale sync caches from older desktop workflows. Hot searches include aac to m4r, iphone custom ringtone, m4r 30 seconds, airdrop ringtone, garageband alternative, and no itunes ringtone because users want a memorable hook that survives earpiece, speaker, and Bluetooth hands-free. Ringtone, text tone, and alarm slots follow different settings paths—exporting the right intent prevents imported files from looking missing. Clipping someone else's voice, meeting audio, or watermarked promos still carries copyright and privacy duties even when the file is tiny. Ai2Done keeps the iPhone variant practical: read caps, pick a window with clean attacks, export M4R, AirDrop or cable it, validate under Phone Ringtone, then log filenames before deleting the AAC master.
How to ship an incoming-call M4R that actually shows up on iPhone
- Open AAC to M4R, choose the iPhone ringtone variant, confirm whether the source is raw AAC or a demuxed track, then read max upload size and recommended duration limits on the page.
- Trim inside the safe duration window, avoid slicing mid-plosive, optionally tame peaks so Bluetooth car kits do not clip the first syllable, then export the M4R with a descriptive filename.
- Transfer via Files, AirDrop, or cable, open Settings › Sounds & Haptics › Ringtone, audition the new entry, assign it to VIP contacts if needed, and keep the AAC source until everyone signs off.