Hi Cheryl,
In the dialog in VisioVoice where you give the track a name you can
actually also change the name of the playlist to which the track will
be added. The default is "VisioVoice". Then the reason you found them
in that folder called VisioVoice is because after the conversion
VisioVoice automatically sets the "Artist" to "VisioVoice" and the
"Genre" to "Books & Spoken". This should also make it easier to find
the tracks within iTunes, however, I am not sure how easy it is to
search for things inside iTunes if you rely on VoiceOver given that
iTunes is not very accessible.
david.
At 6:15 PM -0600 11/3/06, Cheryl Homiak wrote:
I think I may have solved the mystery. The aiff files appeared in
~/Music/itunes/iTunes Music/Unknown Artist/Unknown Album and in fact
the last one I did as a test is still there. But that's not where
the mp3 ends up. It ends up im ~/usic/itunes/iTunes
Music/Visiovoice. I didn't realize it would be put under Visiovoice.
I found it when I used spotlight and then I had it shown in finder
so I could find out where it was. this was a short file and it
worked; now i'm trying it with a longer file since I still don't
think I see the book I tried yesterday. will let you know if this
longer one works.
--
Cheryl
"Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also."
--
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David Niemeijer, CTO
AssistiveWare(R)
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.assistiveware.com/
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