I just bought an audiobook in Windows Protected Media format which I intend to convert to MP3 so I can put it on a portable player that does not handle WMA protected media. The thing I usually do when I have Windows Protected Media files is to turn each file into a .WAV file by burning it to a CD, then ripping it to the desired MP3. The problem I have with this, of course, is that I have to waste as many CD's as there are files in the set for the book! OK, I could probably get away with not doing this by using rewritable discs, but at this time I have none of those, and many hundred non-rewritables. But even though I have more non-rewritables than I'll need, I want to be green about it and not have to throw away four perfectly good discs just because I don't need them any more. Is there a way to convert directly from protected WMA to either WAV or MP3 without actually having to physically create the intermediate CD?
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