Download Audio Converter by Media Human, which is what I’ve been using to convert everything to M4A for my phone for years.
It’s free and then you don’t have to be limited to listening to stuff that people have only uploaded in M4A or MP3
You need a program to convert the torrent files to whatever format you want to listen to. I use Mediahuman to convert all these great concerts. Here's a link for you to check it out. https://www.mediahuman.com/audio-converter/
storage does have it’s limitations! you could always down concert you music, either within the iTunes settings themselves or a tool like mediahuman audio converter. based on my, albeit limited, knowledge of iPods, AAC/M4A is the most efficient storage medium, with being developed by Apple and optimized and all that. also keep in mind that converting down in bitrate will affect the quality of your music. best of luck!
For converting look at this one it can reconvert back into the source folder or folders
https://www.mediahuman.com/audio-converter/
As for batch tagging try MP3 tag it's free and you can get both on Mac or Windows
Lossless legs is legit. I use mediahuman audio converter to convert FLAC to 320kbps MP3, saves a lot of space and I personally can't tell the difference, plus everything supports MP3s (even my 11 year old car), but FLAC as more limited support.
If you can't get that to work, I use this tool on Windows to convert my FLAC into ALAC files and it works great!
https://www.mediahuman.com/audio-converter/
On Mac, I use XLD.
FLAC is supported by all DJ software so if you're taking a laptop to a gig and plugging in then you'll be fine.
When it comes to USB sticks you always want to have more than one anyway so converting those FLAC files to AIFF on one of them would be a good way to have all your bases covered. The process is simple and I use Media Human's audio converter for this.
I prefer Mediahuman Audio Converter. Since I consider lossy formats obsolete for all but live-streaming applications, I want to ask, what sort of storage or bandwidth limitation are you facing, that you want to use lossy compression?
Come ti hanno detto è possibile; se cerchi un programma che se ne occupi puoi dare un'occhiata a MediaHuman Audio Converter, io lo uso da anni e non ho mai avuto problemi :)
I like VidCoder for encoding videos (it uses the Handbrake engine), Caesium for images, and Media Human Audio Converter for audio
The Spek app is a free download. As long as it takes to drag a drop a file is the time it takes to check if it’s real or fake. If your DLing a full EP/LP folder, you can check the individual tracks as they complete. If they’re all coming up as bad transcodes (fakes) you can cancel the remaining DL.
I use MediaHuman Audio Converter. It’s free and fast. There are many apps that will convert audio files, including iTunes.
Y'a plusieurs logiciels qui font ça, mais Microsoft a déployé un outil pour Windows 10.
Je recommande aussi de les convertir à un format plus standard (mp3, aac, ogg...). Moi je fais ça avec VLC mais c'est souvent au cas par cas, je ne sais pas si c'est bien pour faire ça en masse. Sinon j'ai vu ce soft.
On second thought I might remember it incorrectly, I’m not in front of my computer right now but if it’s a problem just convert the mp3 into wav with mediahuman audio converter https://www.mediahuman.com/audio-converter/
I do on my hard drive but my upload speed is horrible at the minute, so unless you don't mind waiting a few days it might be easier if you download a media converter.
I'd recommend MediaHuman
It's purely because the audio is the highest quality - in theory you get exactly what the studio / producer intended.
Serato allows you to modify the tempo and/or pitch of tracks. To achieve this, it must analyse the frequencies which contribute to the music, and what you hear is actually a sort of "re-synthesised" version of the original track. If you start with a poor quality file, those quality issues will be magnified by Serato, and the output will be poor.
Also, when playing on a large sound system (e.g. a club), I'm led to believe that any quality issues are more noticeable compared to a home system.
.wav
is an ancient standard, so it's supported by pretty much any software.
I would much prefer Beatport to sell .flac
, which gives you the same quality, but with the benefits of metadata and compression i.e. smaller files, but other people have their own preferences; basically no-one can agree on what the standard lossless format should be, and no single format seems to be supported across all hardware and software. I consider this entirely Apple's fault - FLAC is an open format, but they introduced ALAC to create an artificial lock-in with iTunes / iPod.
I would imagine that Beatport just went for the lowest common denominator (wave files), and they leave it up to you to do your own conversion and tagging.
So, pick a lossless format, and convert your files. But, don't rush your decision - you'll want support from all your software (iTunes? Serato...), and hardware e.g. portable devices, phone, CDJs or other DJ hardware, etc.
On a Mac, I use this software for my conversion needs:
I use MediaHuman Audio Converter. Seems to do the job well. Alternatively if I’m wanting it in AAC I’ll use the Mastered for iTunes droplets which are pretty useful for converting quickly.
An app called MediaHuman Audio Converter will automatically detect CUE files and parse the tracks appropriately. From there, you can divide the single, large file into separate, smaller files. As for why RuTracker users are fond of range rips, I have no idea. All I know is that it's really annoying when you only want one song from an album.
Yeah, if you’re on your computer download MediaHuman Audio Converter. It’s this app that can convert files, so you can convert FLAC to ALAC (Apple Lossless Audio Codec) which is basically FLAC for itunes and is compatible for itunes.
Maybe try a different program to see if you have same issues? I used to use XLD (with no problems) but have lately been using MediaHuman audio converter (Link).
Hey thaks for the suggestion! I was thinking of doing this, apparently Google Play Music does it too, but would like to see if there's a way where I can do it via USB to phone from my laptop instead.
I normally use XLD, which does batch conversions but when you drag & drop albums from iTunes it just converts them all to the same folder, not by their album etc.
I actually just stumbled across MediaHuman Converter which can convert them into their own respective folders! Works perfectly and really fast.
Only issue is now, when trying to drag & drop all my lossy files from iTunes, it does the same thing by putting all the individual files into one folder.
Is there any way or program that can do this?
I could just re-convert them with MediaHuman, but some files are less than 320kbps so I don't want to re-convert them and lose more audio quality.
Any help would be great!
VLC Player can do this. Open your m4a in VLC. Then pull down "File" and select "Convert / Stream ...". If you're picky about sound quality, save it as FLAC which is compressed, but without loss of quality.
Also MediaHuman Audio Converter will do the job.
MediaHuman Audio Converter - https://www.mediahuman.com/audio-converter/
This is what I use to convert FLAC files. You need a 3rd party application for conversion as FLAC is not compatible with iTunes.
There are hundreds more on the net, but I’ve never had an issue with MediaHuman.