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QCP files created by the Voice Memo feature on a [[Palm Treo]] can be played without conversion by [[Windows Media Player]] if the file is renamed with a [[WAV]] extension. Some other audio file players, such as Real Player, can not play these files, and [[Windows Media Player]] won't play them unless the extension is changed to [[WAV]].
QCP files created by the Voice Memo feature on a [[Palm Treo]] can be played without conversion by [[Windows Media Player]] if the file is renamed with a [[WAV]] extension. Some other audio file players, such as Real Player, can not play these files, and [[Windows Media Player]] won't play them unless the extension is changed to [[WAV]].


However, this technique won't work on all phones, specifically an [[LG8300]] using [[Verizon Wireless]], as well as a Motorola Razr V3m using Alltel. There is a work-around that does work, and may be a useful alternative on other phones. If you take the sound file, and email it to yourself directly from your phone, something along the way (your mobile phone provider, i.e. Verizon Wireless) translates it to a WAV file, and makes it an attachment to the email. You can then play the WAV attachment directly in [[Windows Media Player]]. Terribly slow, and you have to tolerate any connection charges, and do it one file at a time. {{POV}}
However, this technique won't work on all phones, specifically an [[LG8300]] using [[Verizon Wireless]], as well as a Motorola Razr V3m using Alltel. There is a work-around that does work, and may be a useful alternative on other phones. If you take the sound file, and email it to yourself directly from your phone, something along the way (your mobile phone provider, i.e. Verizon Wireless) translates it to a WAV file, and makes it an attachment to the email. You can then play the WAV attachment directly in [[Windows Media Player]]. Terribly slow, and you have to tolerate any connection charges, and do it one file at a time. {{POV|date=May 2008}}


Qualcomm, which originated the format, has removed an internal web page link from the page that formerly discussed QCP. Great, another orphan format courtesy of technological change and law suits: http://www.qualcomm.com/about/qct_redirect.html : "Out of an abundance of caution, due to the December 31st, 2007 injunction ordered against certain Qualcomm products, Qualcomm has temporarily removed certain web content until it can be reviewed and modified if necessary to ensure compliance with the injunction. It may be several more days or weeks before these pages are accessible again. Thank you for your patience."
Qualcomm, which originated the format, has removed an internal web page link from the page that formerly discussed QCP. Great, another orphan format courtesy of technological change and law suits: http://www.qualcomm.com/about/qct_redirect.html : "Out of an abundance of caution, due to the December 31st, 2007 injunction ordered against certain Qualcomm products, Qualcomm has temporarily removed certain web content until it can be reviewed and modified if necessary to ensure compliance with the injunction. It may be several more days or weeks before these pages are accessible again. Thank you for your patience."

Revision as of 23:36, 9 May 2008

The QCP file format is used by many cellular telephone manufacturers for providing voice ring tones. It is based on RIFF, a generic format for storing chunks of data identified by tags. The QCP format does not specify how voice data in the file is encoded. Rather, it defines sets of meta-data which identify the encoding scheme used, where individual chunks of the encoded voice data are stored in the file, and supplementary information such as indexing points and text labels. Typical encoding schemes used in QCP files are QCELP and EVRC.

QCP files created by the Voice Memo feature on a Palm Treo can be played without conversion by Windows Media Player if the file is renamed with a WAV extension. Some other audio file players, such as Real Player, can not play these files, and Windows Media Player won't play them unless the extension is changed to WAV.

However, this technique won't work on all phones, specifically an LG8300 using Verizon Wireless, as well as a Motorola Razr V3m using Alltel. There is a work-around that does work, and may be a useful alternative on other phones. If you take the sound file, and email it to yourself directly from your phone, something along the way (your mobile phone provider, i.e. Verizon Wireless) translates it to a WAV file, and makes it an attachment to the email. You can then play the WAV attachment directly in Windows Media Player. Terribly slow, and you have to tolerate any connection charges, and do it one file at a time.

Qualcomm, which originated the format, has removed an internal web page link from the page that formerly discussed QCP. Great, another orphan format courtesy of technological change and law suits: http://www.qualcomm.com/about/qct_redirect.html : "Out of an abundance of caution, due to the December 31st, 2007 injunction ordered against certain Qualcomm products, Qualcomm has temporarily removed certain web content until it can be reviewed and modified if necessary to ensure compliance with the injunction. It may be several more days or weeks before these pages are accessible again. Thank you for your patience."

  • RFC 3625 - The QCP File Format and Media Types for Speech Data