Thanks, Steve. I might as well just do it then. I don't have the
occasion to convert M4A's often, but it's the kind of thing that, when
you need it, you gotta have it, and today was one of those times. Before
I saw your reply to my post, I did the conversion the stupid way, by
playing it in
Steve,
I installed the QuickTime player to do the same thing with Sound Forge 14 and
have not had any problems. When I did that, the website made it sound as
though there was a charge, but there was no charge. Although I didn't have any
problems, I read somewhere, probably here, that there
I need to convert an M4A to something else--anything--WAV, MP3, OGG,
something I can play and manipulate in, say, Reaper. I thought Sound
Forge could do it, but not without installing the QuickTime plugin. If I
have to, I'll do that, but is it cool to do so? Does anything break by
doing that?