Hi people, So how would saving an Audible book to an SD card work? Would you be able to do that without messing around with start times?
I'd would also like to copy a 13 hour radio series, which I have on CD, to an SD card. My guess would be, from reading this conversation, that I should make it into a playlist, but then what? I'm pretty much of an iTunes dunce, so I hope the explanation is fit for a three year old:) Cheers Adrienne On Oct 31, 10:27 pm, Esther <[email protected]> wrote: > Hi Ray, > > To burn Audible books to audio CDs using iTunes, use Command+I to access the > Options tab of the Audible track and set the Start and Stop time boxes each > time before burning the next segment (e.g., 0:00 to 80:00, then 80:00 to > 160:00, etc.) Audible suggests that you just adjust the start time, but if > you want, you can check the start and stop time locations to match natural > breaks with the RestartAt AppleScript from Tim Kilburn's VoiceOver Downloads > web page:http://web.me.com/kilburns/voiceover/downloads.html > For example, I split a set of short stories so that the breaks would come at > the beginning and end of complete stories on the audio CD. > Remember to turn these settings off when you're done, or your Audible track > will only play the section between the start time and the stop time that > you've set. A bit more tedious than doing this with the app on the Windows > side. > > Here's the link to the help instructions on the Audible web site: > <http://audible.custhelp.com/app/answers/detail/a_id/3128/~/cd-burning...)> > > HTH. Cheers, > > Esther > > On Oct 31, 2011, at 09:10, Ray Foret Jr wrote: > > > > > > > > > Say, ever burned an audible.com book to CD using ITunes? I can't imagine > > how that's done. > > > When I looked up the instructions at audible, it seemed to me like you had > > to access stuff I reckoned we don't have access to. > > > For my audio CD's, I just use either Simply Burns or Burn. > > > Great tools both of them; but, I found that with Burn, you need to take > > care to ensure that the files you are burning have 44.1 oversampling and 16 > > bit depth. IF not, the files may play at half or double speed on the CD. > > > Sincerely, > > The Constantly Barefooted Ray!!! > > > Now a very proud and happy Mac user!!! > > > Skype name: > > barefootedray > > > Facebook: > > facebook.com/ray.foretjr.1 > > > On Oct 31, 2011, at 2:02 PM, Gerry Cook wrote: > > >> thanks there had to be a way just knowing it. Gerry Cook > >> cheers gerry > >> [email protected] > > >> On 01/11/2011, at 3:25 AM, Esther wrote: > > >>> Hi Gerry, > > >>> To make sure you burn an Audio CD, create your playlist in iTunes and > >>> select it in the sources table. Then, after you use VO-M and navigate to > >>> the "File" menu of iTunes and arrow down to the "Burn Playlist to Disc" > >>> menu option, select the radio button for "Audio CD" as the format in the > >>> dialog window. > > >>> HTH. Cheers, > > >>> Esther > > >>> On Oct 31, 2011, at 01:19, Gerry Cook wrote: > > >>>> Hi all! I tried to burn a music cd so i could put it in a normal cd > >>>> player, but when i went to vo m and arrowed down to burn the contence of > >>>> the cd to a blank it said the name but seemed to just burn an image and > >>>> there was no music, and there seems no option in itunes once you've > >>>> ripped it in to your itunes library to burn it to a blank cd. Any help > >>>> would be appreciated, thanks. > >>>> Gerry Cook > >>>> cheers gerry > >>>> [email protected] -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "MacVisionaries" group. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. To unsubscribe from this group, send email to [email protected]. For more options, visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries?hl=en.
