Wav file for voicemail greeting?

Is there any way to use an audio file (such as wav,etc) for voicemail greeting?

No. Your greeting is on AT&T's servers not your phone. You can play something over the phone to record something to it.

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    9ov7 wrote:
    Hello everyone,
         I am really frustrated trying to create a .wav file for our phone system and I was hoping someone might have some suggestions as I am new to using Adobe Audition. Our phone system will only accept .wav files for our hold messages but the tricky part is that is can only be a maxiimum streaming bit rate of 64 kbps. Everything we've created under 256 kbps becomes in-audible and I'm really not sure what to do as the current messages sound fantastic. Our current hold message is 35 seconds long and we have another one we are about to do which will be 2 minutes long (uuuugh).
    - I've tried first converting the .wav file to an .mp3, lowering the bit rate to 64 kbps, then converting back to .wav but the bit rate goes up to almost 1500 kbps after re-converting.
    Eugh! Converting to MP3 is absolutely not the thing to do!
    - I've tried making the track mono, reducing the sample rate to 22k but the size ends up being somewhere between 512 and 768. If I lower the sample rate much further and convert to 8bit, the audio sounds terrible.
    - I've tried re-recording the audio on a handheld .mp3 recorder hoping the initial quality would be less (originally recorded on a PC through Audition with a external mic).
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    "Howard Perlman" <[email protected]> wrote
    in message
    news:f3h85b$jba$[email protected]..
    > Kind of a weird idea, but I'd like to see if it would be
    possible to
    > "assemble"
    > a WAV file (using CF) from smaller WAV files.
    >
    > My idea: We report of the heights of rivers across the
    U.S. (as in, at
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    > moment, the Potomac River is 5.45 feet). I am able to
    have people send in
    > an
    > email asking for a certain river, and CF produces an
    email back to them
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    > the river height (process runs every 5 minutes).
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    > But I thought of sending them back a voice (WAV) file to
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    > phones, so
    > they could hear the river height instead of using a text
    email. I thought
    > if I
    > could have a library of small WAV files for each number,
    a "point", and
    > some
    > words, maybe I could combine the needed pieces from
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    >
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    >
    > I can't believe CF could join these files, but if anyone
    has any ideas,
    > please
    > let me know!
    > Thanks....
    >

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