Thanks once again for your wealth of knowledge, Esther. Funny, the reason I bought my Macs, before them, my iPhone, and originally my iPod, was essentially because I loved the way Audible's audiobooks played on my iPod. I then took on the mammoth task of importing my digital media into iTunes and organising it to better support listening to audiobooks. My music library is still a bit of a mess, but my audiobook collection is quite decent. It makes me happy.
Your explanation of why the audiobooks I created with AudiobookBinder stop after around 13.x hours makes a lot of sense. Especially given the fact that they oddly seemed to always stop playing at a different point. However, one strange thing is that all the audiobooks I made into one file with AudiobookBinder show up in iTunes as being 13 hours and some number of minutes. So perhaps there is some limit in AudiobookBinder itself, likely for the reasons you give, that limits the files to this size. It's hard to tell though. I can't find anything in AudiobookBinder's documentation that mentions this. I did, however, find a tutorial on getting chapters to work. Hopefully the chapters at least will work next time I try. AudiobookBinder at least works for ripping CDs as audiobooks as each disc becomes one file and is well below the limit it seems. I'll download the trial of AudiobookBuilder and give it a go. Thanks for the link! Will there be a way to split my m4b files created with AudiobookBinder back into its constituent parts ? Cheers Nic -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "MacVisionaries" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. Visit this group at http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries?hl=en. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.
