

- #Audible converter without itunes activation code#
- #Audible converter without itunes update#
- #Audible converter without itunes manual#
- #Audible converter without itunes series#
- #Audible converter without itunes download#
I kind of wish this came sooner because I just took my entire audible collection and converted it in OpenAudible the last few days. This way you don't set a batch job and come back to it stuck on the prompt after processing a book or two. It might be nice to have a setting to always remember an option, e.g., always create a new folder.
#Audible converter without itunes update#
Unfortunately it would still result in having to manually rename and update metadata for each folder. Hmm, tunnel vision! I see the prompt now which states new folder but for some reason I misread it.
#Audible converter without itunes series#
So it would be nice if the colon position was noted and replaced with a valid file folder/name character (perhaps a dash?) to maintain separation between series and book. whoops! I expect this would be the case for most users).Īdding colon to the additional punctuation box does allow the rest of the book title to be saved but merges, e.g.,Īgent G: Infiltrator > Agent G Infiltrator Interesting, it might be helpful adding a visible menu as I can't recall using a program besides the command prompt that had a user menu there (and I didn't read your user guide. There is an option to add additional punctuation marks or special characters in the Basic Settings dialog, via the system menu. It looks like the metadata loses the information to the right of the colon too. Where you now have no idea which book for which folder without listening to it. Sword of Draskara: Casters of Syndrial, Book 2 It happens when authors (or whoever decides the naming format) go withĪlternately, you lose the series name when the format is

I noticed in at least 2 of the book series I tested with. Could you give me more details on the title pattern in this case?īy the way, simply replying to the "Overwrite" message box would result inĬorrect, the title tag is where this causes an issue. The heuristic says, that everything left of the terminating punctuation mark is the meaningful part of the title and the rest is "noise".īut it appears that in your example the heuristic is not adequate. Unfortunately, Audible does not follow a strict pattern for naming books (or I haven't discovered it yet), so my parsing rules are based on heuristic findings. If you add the colon, it will be applied for parsing, but will not appear in the end result, see above. Click the icon on the title bar to access it. You can, however, explicitly allow the colon to be valid. As do all punctuation marks except for comma and apostrophe. In both cases, invalid file and folder name characters will just be removed, there is no substitute character at the moment.įor the book title, the colon acts as a terminator by default. To avoid misunderstanding, we are talking about parsing the book title tag.
#Audible converter without itunes download#
Parallelizes the work where possible, using every available CPU core, for high throughput.ĭirect download of the setup package:
#Audible converter without itunes activation code#

#Audible converter without itunes manual#
I let Mp3tag create a playlist, put tracks and playlist onto a USB stick and could play it everywhere, with almost any audio hard- and software.īut it involved a lot of manual work and the result still wasn't perfect.

What I always liked were the short tracks iTunes created, albeit cut mid-word every 8 minutes. I still followed the official procedure with Apple iTunes, produced (virtual) CDs, encoded to MP3, and post-processed with mp3DirectCut and Mp3tag. However, none of theses tools came close to the work-flow I have been used to for a number of years. Several of them take advantage of FFmpeg, which supports AAX file processing for some time now. There are a number of tools around which allow you to convert your Audible AAX books to an open audio format, MP3 in particular.
