Export thread

Voicemail download

#1

Dave

Dave

Does anyone know of a way to download and save as a file a voicemail message from an Android phone? I checked with the carrier and all they said was that there are 3rd party apps that will allow this to be done, but declined to name any.

My wife's birthday was Friday. She didn't realize until this morning that her mom had called and left her a happy birthday message. I want to save the message before it gets erased.


#2

Gruebeard

Gruebeard

Does anyone know of a way to download and save as a file a voicemail message from an Android phone? I checked with the carrier and all they said was that there are 3rd party apps that will allow this to be done, but declined to name any.

My wife's birthday was Friday. She didn't realize until this morning that her mom had called and left her a happy birthday message. I want to save the message before it gets erased.
You could hook your phone into the computer, from headphone to mic, and record the voicemail as it plays.


#3

evilmike

evilmike

You could hook your phone into the computer, from headphone to mic, and record the voicemail as it plays.
CNET was suggesting using Audacity to do this.


#4

Gruebeard

Gruebeard

CNET was suggesting using Audacity to do this.
Fancy.

I was just thinking of the basic Windows sound recorder buried somewhere in the OS.


#5

Eriol

Eriol

I have never looked, but I would guess that any app that allowed you to record a phone call would do the same, since it's still just a call.


#6

drifter

drifter

I think you can upload to Dropbox, although you may need to convert the file.


#7

strawman

strawman

Many android phones use carrier provided voicemail, and so getting a copy of the actual digital recording may not be possible, but if it is it'll depend on your carrier.

As others have suggested an analog recording using audacity and a male to male cable might be your best bet:

https://www.google.com/amp/amp.timeinc.net/time/3666242/save-voicemails/?source=dam

You should probably do this as a first pass just to get the voicemail while you look at other methods to get a better copy.


#8

PatrThom

PatrThom

Well, it's actually quite easy. You just...
Android phone
...oh, uh, never mind. The M2M cable via analog is probably the simplest, though you might be able to do some finagling to record it via some sort of Bluetooth device if you absolutely have to have it in digital form.

--Patrick


#9

figmentPez

figmentPez

AT&T's Visual Voicemail app allows you to save voicemail as a file. So it's definitely possible on Android, at least with certain carriers.


Top