StoneKy Member Jul 30, 2011 280 21 Oct 8, 2011 #1 My VOIP Voice Mail comes as a .WAV attachment to my email. How can I play them? I click to open the attachment and my options are MOBO and MX but they weill not play. Tried thru pop3 account then forwarded to gmail, same results. TIA
My VOIP Voice Mail comes as a .WAV attachment to my email. How can I play them? I click to open the attachment and my options are MOBO and MX but they weill not play. Tried thru pop3 account then forwarded to gmail, same results. TIA
I Icebike Senior Member Apr 28, 2011 1,523 186 Oct 8, 2011 #2 ES Filemanager comes with a built in player (ES Media Player) that plays .WAV files. Google Music plays .WAV files BUZZ Player plays .WAV files.
ES Filemanager comes with a built in player (ES Media Player) that plays .WAV files. Google Music plays .WAV files BUZZ Player plays .WAV files.
StoneKy Member Jul 30, 2011 280 21 Oct 8, 2011 Thread starter #3 I can find the files with ES Filemanager then when I click to play with ES Player they won't play, same with Goog Music. Don't have BUZZ since it's a paid app. At one time I could play straight from my email attachment and I think it was with MOBO but not now, possibly I screwed up a setting. Any other suggestions?
I can find the files with ES Filemanager then when I click to play with ES Player they won't play, same with Goog Music. Don't have BUZZ since it's a paid app. At one time I could play straight from my email attachment and I think it was with MOBO but not now, possibly I screwed up a setting. Any other suggestions?
I Icebike Senior Member Apr 28, 2011 1,523 186 Oct 8, 2011 #4 If ES Player and Google Music won't play them they must be some weird ancient form of wav file. Probably mono, 8khz or something equally lame. Any choices on the voip providers web site as to format (aac, mp3)? Any specs for the type of wav? You might ***** to them that they are becoming incompatible with modern devices.
If ES Player and Google Music won't play them they must be some weird ancient form of wav file. Probably mono, 8khz or something equally lame. Any choices on the voip providers web site as to format (aac, mp3)? Any specs for the type of wav? You might ***** to them that they are becoming incompatible with modern devices.
StoneKy Member Jul 30, 2011 280 21 Oct 8, 2011 Thread starter #5 Remote Wav Free from the market works great. Thanks IB
J jmlivingston Member Nov 17, 2010 27 0 Oct 12, 2011 #6 +1 for Remote Wave. Sent from my DROIDX using Tapatalk