Hi Alan,
Have not used the app you mention, I have used Toast, QT Pro, and iMovie to
extract audio.
But, have you tried duplicating the .m4v file (so you still have the original
in case).
Then in Finder just changing the extension from .m4v to .m4a?
It 'should' change the video file to an
About a month ago I paid for and downloaded something called Real Racing 2 from
the App Store.
It has never worked and I cannot get any response from the makers.
Lost my money on that one !
But perhaps a WARNING to others !
On 01/07/2012, at 12:59 PM, Alan Smith wrote:
Hi
Has anyone from
Hi Ronni
Yes, a possible solution. Thank you. The simple renaming of the file
extension made it recognisable as an MPEG-4 audio file.I then edited and
re-saved the file in MP3 format which was recognised by my little MP3 player.
As you noted, the audio file is the same size as the
Hi Alen,
You could give this shareware utility, ffmpegX, a try. I have had mixed success
with it as it depends on a number of plugins that must be downloaded
separately. Once it it running, drop the file on the left side of the app
window and select the preset Movie audio to mp3.
Hi Alan,
This is the way I have exported audio from iMovie clips to AIFF format and then
use iTunes to convert the AIFF format to MP3
To export only audio in iMovie'11:
If you need to export just the audio of your project, iMovie allows you to
export only the audio as an AIFF file.
How to
Hi Ronni
Thank you. Very clear instructions. Wow - there's a lot more to iMovie than
I had ever explored before.
This process is quite practical for my occasional (monthly meeting) needs, and
the MOV file can be edited and split as needed.
WannaAudio and QT7 Pro may provide a lazier
Hi Carlo
Thanks for the suggestion. I had noticed that ffmpeg kept cropping up in
discussion groups, but I couldn't understand how it all fitted together with
containers and what have you. It seemed to be aimed at tech fanatics!
I was going to buy WannaAudio to see if it would work when
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