you know transcoding will make things worse right? if you have no other option and don't have the original media, google dbpoweramp. simple, free, and not shady.
+JuggerNaut+ wrote:you know transcoding will make things worse right? if you have no other option and don't have the original media, google dbpoweramp. simple, free, and not shady.
heh, its only some bullshit i skimmed off a friend ill never really listen to but regardless wma format is toast.
shit, up to almost 300 complete albums now and i have yet to rip the 200+ sitting behind me. (not to mention the loose 5-7k mp3 files) gonna be busy for awhile...
In the windows version only, you can drag unprotected WMA files to iTunes or similarly import them, and they'll convert to AAC (or at least one of the iTunes codecs).
Canis wrote:In the windows version only, you can drag unprotected WMA files to iTunes or similarly import them, and they'll convert to AAC or mp3 (or at least one of the iTunes codecs).
Canis wrote:In the windows version only, you can drag unprotected WMA files to iTunes or similarly import them, and they'll convert to AAC (or at least one of the iTunes codecs).
right, but are they using their own codec or another for .mp3 conversion/transcoding?
That's a third-party iTunes plug-in program made by Blacktree software that uses the LAME algorithm to encode MP3s in iTunes. iTunes natively uses Quicktime.
Canis wrote:That's a third-party iTunes plug-in program made by Blacktree software that uses the LAME algorithm to encode MP3s in iTunes. iTunes natively uses Quicktime.
thanks for clarification i was pointing out an alternative (almost)