Hi Jane,

You wrote:
Does anyone know if the software will work on iBooks, or do I have to
put it on the iMac?

The requirements for the Mac OverDrive Console are:

Intel® or PowerPC® processor
Mac OS 10.4.9 (or newer)
iTunes® v7.6.2.9 (or newer)
QuickTime® v7.4.5 (or newer)

and you can go to the link for "Download OverDrive Media Console" at:

http://overdrive.com/software/omc


I finally have found out that mPhiladelphia Free Library--or whatever
the title is--will let me download audio books through OverDrive, so
this is a nice addition--if I can get it to work.

You need to check whether your local library subscribes to OverDrive for audiobook downloads. You also need to find out which, if any, titles your library carries as MP3 downloads. That repertoire is currently much smaller than their WMA offerings with digital rights management.

In your case, the web page is at:

http://freelibrary.lib.overdrive.com/

If you don't already have a library card, you should do their on-line sign up for one.

I would use VO-U to navigate to the "Digital Media Advanced Search Link"

You can run various searches, but the key thing is to set the popup for Format: to "OverDrive MP3 Audiobook"

I also opt to set the Results per page popup button to the maximum (25) to minimize the number of pages I have to visit.

There's an optional checkbox for "Only show titles with copies available" that you might want to use the first time you run your search. (This assumes that you want to get a book file to try right away. On a longer term basis, you'll want to put in requests for specific titles regardless of whether they're available right away. You should get an email notification when they get "returned" and are available for you to download.)

Make sure that you select the MP3 version of a title -- you can check whether you can burn, play on a Mac, transfer to iPod, etc.


Can you keep the audio books?  Burn them to CD?  Or do they go away
after whatever the time-limit is?


You can only play them for the period of your borrowing period. (You're supposed to destroy copies that you burn to CD for personal use or delete copies that you transfer to your iPod once your subscription expires.) What happens is that the files will no longer play, transfer, burn outside the subscription period.

Generally, the ability to burn to CD depends on the publisher. Naxos usually lets you burn to CD (but then they also have their own download store which will sell their audiobooks without DRM). That might not be true for recent titles. Blackstone is also pretty good about this. Some publishers won't let any of their books get burned to CD, although they'll let them be played on your computer and transferred to an MP3 player or iPod. What you may find is that the publishers with more restrictive burning policies won't be offering MP3 versions for downloads -- only WMA versions with DRM. So you won't find (yet) MP3 files from Listening Library, for example, although your library might carry some of those titles on audio CD for borrowing.

Also, you'll have to read the instructions on how to transfer to the iPod Shuffle -- it's handled differently, and you need to use iTunes.

Hope this helps.

Cheers,

Esther

On 11/20/08, David Poehlman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
so command-I does not show it as an audio book.  Can you change it?

----- Original Message -----
From: "Esther"
Hi David,

You asked:

When you look at the info for one of the books, is it listed as an
audio
book?


No, as I mentioned in my post below, when you transfer a library's
digital download audiobook from OverDrive.com onto your iPod using
their "Transfer" button, it is listed on your iPod Nano 4G under
Album, Artist, Genre, etc. but it doesn't show up in the Audiobooks
section of your iPod.  That makes sense when I think about it, since
originally only audiobooks purchased from Audible.com or the iTunes
Store would show up in that category.  You're working from the
OverDrive media console (built for the Mac) when you play, download,
or transfer (to iPod) the downloaded Audiobook. It basically shows up
as a series of parts that would each correspond to one audio CD worth
of play (e.g. about 74 minutes) if it were burned to CD.  Some of the
OverDrive titles can be burned to audio CD during the period they are
checked out.  This is like Audible's or iTunes' policy.  The actual
files you download are compressed, so each part's file is about 33 MB
in size rather than 700 MB for an audio CD (about podcast quality in
encoding bit rate). You're expected to delete any files from you iPod
and destroy CD copies you've made once your subscription expires.

Cheers,

Esther

P.S. Most public libraries now maintain audiobook collections on CD
and have online catalogues that are very accessible through web
interfaces.  You can search the catalogs and put in requests on the
web.  There are options to notify you by email when these requests
come in.  This may be easily used even without digital downloads.


----- Original Message -----
From: "Esther"


Hi David,

I just tried all this, and it works fine with VoiceOver.  I have a
downloaded MP3 file playing right now on my iPod Nano 4G, and the
titles are announced. You'll need to have a library card set up with
your local public library, and the library needs to subscribe to
OverDrive.com for audiobook downloads and also have subscription
selections in the category "OverDrive MP3 audiobook file" -- not just
WMA audiobook files.''

The OverDrive console installation for the Mac is fine; I ran this
first.

When you check out a downloadable book, you have to download a license file (that will expire at the end of your checkout period). This will show up in your Safari downloads directory (e.g., you can find it with Command-Option-L and open it in Finder from the Downloads window, but
it will probably just go to the "Downloads" folder under your user
account.)  The license file will have a name that starts with the
title of the book, and ends with an extension type of ".odm".  I
double-clicked it  (by holding down Command, Option, and Shift keys,
and tapping the space bar twice) to open the OverDrive Console.

When you download parts of books, I didn't notice a progress bar, but
there might be one on the Console window.  You can go to your
"Documents/My Media/MP3 Audiobooks" folder in Finder and look under
the folder created for each book to see whether the parts are there,

There's a "Transfer" button that works to send the files to your
connected iPods. The help has information on command sequences to be
used in the case of the iPod Shuffle.  You must have the checkbox to
"Manually manage your music" checked on the iPod to use the transfer.

Oddly, the tracks don't show up under Audiobooks -- you can find them
under the  "Recently Added" smart playlist, or under Album (Book
Title), or Artitst (Author), or Genre, etc. but not under Audiobooks.

Hope this is of interest.

Cheers,

Esther














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