Related
Please be patient, I am new to HTC and WM6 and I'm hoping to get some recommendations
I have about 4GB of music on my micro SD that I copied off my iPod, so it's in acc format which the audio manager doesn't recognize. I downloaded TCPMP and the acc plugin and it plays the music but its doesn't show the song info (title, artist etc) till you open the song.
Also you can't search by artist, or genre like you can in audio manager
Can anyone recommend a good audio player or someway to get audio manager to recognize acc files
I really prefer opera mini over IE but I have to go into the java app first to select it, is there anyway to get an opera shortcut onto the start screen
I really appreciate any advice or tips for the newbie questions
Opera Mobile is designed for smartphones and should give you a regular icon to load it with, mini is made primarily for regular phones with only their crappy build in browsers which is why it works only in java.
iTunes music is the most annoying on planet earth. You can convert it to mp3 or delete the DMA off of it to allow it to play properly but its time consuming and annoying. I dont know of any plugin for Audio Manager that will allow you to play the iTunes music, only what other people have created for other players.
Now if these songs were once full on mp3's or cd's that you copied into iTunes you would be better off copying / ripping those files over to the sd card.
10332007 said:
Now if these songs were once full on mp3's or cd's that you copied into iTunes you would be better off copying / ripping those files over to the sd card.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah most of it is CD rips, I was hoping to avoid having to rip them again
When you initially ripped them did you tell iTunes to connect to the net and pull the information and creat an id3 tag for it? If not then thats why none of the track info is pulling over. iTunes will read the title / cd / artist name off the disct but when you use them as mp3's or in other players I have heard of some issues with the information not being read properly...
All my music is in mp3, ogg, FLAC and other formats on my computer, if my wife wants anything she pulls it over. She has bought some things off iTunes but they are such a pain to use elsewhere that eh.
You should have set ITunes to only rip to MP3 for compatibility reasons such as this. I'm not too sure what/if anything can read aac files on Windows Mobile. I know their is a way to get Opera Mini's icon as well as a way to have it function as your default browser (that is clicking on hyperlinks in e-mails, sms, ect) bring you to Opera Mini. There's quite a lot of info on that if you search.
As far as Opera Mobile, yea it may be designed for Smartphone, and yea it may be better than IE, but it does not in anyway compete with Opera Mini in terms of speed and website rendering.
I listen to a lot of audiobooks during my work commute and used to use my iPod for this. Since I have a decent sized memory card in my X1, I'd rather use it instead so I only need one device with me. The problem is that all of my audiobooks are in .m4b format, so I need something that runs on WinMo that can:
1. Play this .m4b format (I think it's just AAC)
2. Bookmark where I am in each book so if I close and re-open the player, the book continues from where I left off
3. Allows fine tuned rewind/fast forward as I often rewind 5-30 seconds to hear some part of a book a second time
I've found tcpmp/core player can play .m4b's, but it's not great at bookmarking. That is, if I'm listening to a book, close the player and re-open it, the bookmark works fine and it continues to play where I left off. However, if I open any other file in between, the bookmark is lost. This is made worse by the inability to do any fine tuned rewind/fast forward. The only option is to use the progress slider, which tends to jump in VERY large increments.
Any suggestions? Is there another audiobook format I should try which would work better?
Convert to MP3 then use something like:
http://motorola-windows-mobile.hand...id=1093&for=Motorola+Windows+Mobile audiobook
Unfortunately m4b is a gash Apple format and so needs to be converted...
You could also try Kinoma (www.kinoma.com). Not sure if it plays .mb4, I use it for books from audible.
I personally just use the standard windows media player, I also listen to alot of audiobooks usually a few hours a day and when I get to and from work I use the notes program to make a note of where I am. This isn't necessery all the time because I can just minimize windows media player and then start it back up when I want to carry on listening (the program doesn't fully close when pressing x)
I have never used an audiobook on an ipod so im not sure what type of support it has though it would be nice to have the feature but it isn't something I really need, it's easy to do without.
bump for more opinions.
I use CorePalayer for my audio books.
http://www.coreplayer.com/
Resco Audio Recorder allows you to bookmark MP3 files at specific points (Store lots of bookmarks for various MP3's), it's also got a finger friendly fast forward/rewind.
According to the website it plays the following files
MP3 — The most popular audio format ever. Widely supported by all platforms. Ideal trade off between quality and hardware requirements.
Ogg Vorbis — Alternative to MP3 with higher quality, but requires faster PDA.
Speex — Outstanding speech compression ratio, but also needs fast device.
WAV — Lossless quality, low hardware requirements, but huge memory consumption.
RAF — Minimal hardware requirements, minimal energy consumption, compresstion ratio 4:1.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It also can do standard voice recording and phone call recording
Edit: Just looked on their site. They have a Codec pack addon that allows recording/playing of AAC files
Second Edit: They also have a seven day demo (I'm assuming you can add the demo of the codec pack as well) So that you can test it to see if you like the software
THJahar said:
Resco Audio Recorder allows you to bookmark MP3 files at specific points (Store lots of bookmarks for various MP3's), it's also got a finger friendly fast forward/rewind.
According to the website it plays the following files
It also can do standard voice recording and phone call recording
Edit: Just looked on their site. They have a Codec pack addon that allows recording/playing of AAC files
Second Edit: They also have a seven day demo (I'm assuming you can add the demo of the codec pack as well) So that you can test it to see if you like the software
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ooooh, now this is what I was looking for. The bookmarking feature works very well for my audiobooks and the touch friendly controls are exactly what I was looking for. It doesn't seem to like the m4b files, even with the AAC codec, but I can easily convert my m4b's to mp3's and everything works wonderfully.
Thanks!
Or have a look at MortPlayer.
With favorites (easy navigation through your music/audiobook folders), special audio book support (auto bookmarks for audio book files/folders, auto rewind when continuing, ...), bookmarks, finger friendly since the first beta (somewhere in 2004, iirc), skin support (including WVGA since 3.31b73), ...
However, the AAC/MP4 plugin from GSPlayer (included in beta installers) doesn't work properly on all devices, and I'm not sure whether m4b is included...
Hey, I found out, that Audiooboks in the m4B Format can't be handled by the Mort Player.
BUT
If you rename the file from m4b to m4a the player can handle them.
Cheers
Jens
I was very excited to try this as I have a number of .m4b audiobooks I would like to listen to on the Android. But I just tried renaming an .m4b file to an .m4a file on my Android G1 and it still did not play I have been using the Ambling BookPlayer which works well with mp3, oog, or m4a files, but renaming the m4b to m4a didn't work.
The Ambling BookPlayer has worked very well for playing audiobooks even those that have a lot of individual audio files, and it has a bookmarking history with undo and redo so you can jump right back to each place you started or stopped listening. The Ambling BookPlayer Lite is free on the Android Market and it supports automatically downloading the free LibriVox audiobooks directly to the Android.
I would be interested in knowing if anyone else been able to successfully play an m4b file after renaming it to an m4a? and if so which Android phone does it work on?
I found that there is a request for Google to add support for the m4b format to the Android at http://code.google.com/p/android/issues/detail?id=3923 You can boost the priority of this request by going to the page and clicking on the star to cast your vote in favor of adding this feature.
Audiobooks from iTunes in M4B are encrypted. Simply renaming the files from .m4b to .m4a will not help. You need to decrypt the files first. Google for Requiem.
The m4b format does support encryption. Some m4b audio files are encrypted but others are not.
If you get one of the conversion programs (there are many available) that will convert mp3 files into m4b files, the resulting m4b files are not encrypted. Other m4b files, such as those sold by some stores, are encrypted.
If you purchase an audiobook on CD, rip it to mp3s, combine them and convert them to an m4b (just for the purpose of getting bookmarking to keep track of your place in the audiobook), the resulting m4b file is not encrypted.
new player app
Here is a new Android app Akimbo Audiobook Player that has m4b support with chapters and artwork. Finally I have got back to where I was years ago on the ipod
So my father and step mother recently got new Android phone, they both got Evo 4G's. My father has been working non stop to get his wife's music and audio books setup so that it's really easy to make playlist, sync them, play them back, etc. He has used WMP, had issues with that, so I suggested DoubleTwist. He messed with it and didn't like the interface, felt that it wasn't that intuitive. I decided that I would actually mess with dT myself so that I could see if it was worth suggesting to others. I found it pretty easy to make playlist and sync them and stuff, but there is one major problem with it, it ignores track numbers. I can't get it to show me track numbers at all, and can't get it to organize track in an album by track number, and if I drag a whole album into it's own playlist, it organized in alphabetical order, I can't get it to play by track number.
Next, I decided to mess with Motorola Media Link. I never even got to the point of seeing if it will work with my N1 cause I couldn't get it to sort by album, or artist or whatever when I clicked on the column header like would happen in Windows explorer. I can accept Motorola Media Link opening in artist mode first, but I should then be able to click a song, then go and hit the album column header and it will keep the fist song selected and resort the song by album showing the other songs in the same album above and below the original selected song, but that did not happen.
I'm not even going to mess with WMP anymore as I feel that is utter s**t when it comes UI. Doubletwist makes making playlist easy, but ignores track numbers, Motorola Media link doesn't sort things properly. Are there no other truly intuitive, easy to use, fully featured media player/manager for Android devices. I feel that this is going to make it difficult for Android devices to truly win over the hearts of iPhone users, who phone's just work. As much as I hate Apple's communist control over their platform and hardware, you have to give them credit for making a phone that even the technologically inept can use and work without problems
What's wrong with just drag and drop your files? I think that's the easiest way. Don't even need any software, just plug in the cable, it pops up as mass storage, drag over your files to a folder, done
I made the iPhone to N1 jump recently myself and had some similar growing pains in the media management side of things. Although I only really care about music (not podcasts or audiobooks) and have some real anal retentive requirements for playlist management, I've found bTunes as my media player and iSyncr for media management to be a great combination.
bTunes copies the navigation of the iOS iPod app perfectly, but adds in on-the-fly playlist creation and editing under the hood.
iSyncr lets me copy over playlists directly from my iTunes account, and updates playcounts and everything when I run the program.
I'm not sure if those things will apply to your parents' needs as elegantly as they have to my own. But hopefully it might help!
RogerPodacter said:
What's wrong with just drag and drop your files? I think that's the easiest way. Don't even need any software, just plug in the cable, it pops up as mass storage, drag over your files to a folder, done
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's what my father and I do for ourselves, but that's not a good solution for my step mother who's not good with that kind of stuff and really doesn't have any desire to learn that. The ultimate goal of all this is to make it as easy as possible for her so that she can do it all without having to ask my father how or have him do.
sosquidtaste said:
I made the iPhone to N1 jump recently myself and had some similar growing pains in the media management side of things. Although I only really care about music (not podcasts or audiobooks) and have some real anal retentive requirements for playlist management, I've found bTunes as my media player and iSyncr for media management to be a great combination.
bTunes copies the navigation of the iOS iPod app perfectly, but adds in on-the-fly playlist creation and editing under the hood.
iSyncr lets me copy over playlists directly from my iTunes account, and updates playcounts and everything when I run the program.
I'm not sure if those things will apply to your parents' needs as elegantly as they have to my own. But hopefully it might help!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Thanks, I'll send the info to my father and see if that works for him. He's still trying to find a solution for the audio books though. He's does some reading on the Audible Android app that's in beta and it appears to be having issues, so he's leery of installing it. But hopefully the music aspect will work for him.
Playlists and WMP
I am the father.
The biggest issue being able to easily have the playlists show upon the phone.
It can be accomplished with WMP by manually saving the play list as an M3u, then drag and drop that to root of the music folder on the phone, then you have to delete the auto generated WPl list from the pc in order to not have the play list show up twice in the play list list. This has to be repeated each time a change is made to the list.
Wish for WMP:
Allow you to set default play list file type.
For WMP to sync the list to the phone.
Thanks for any future help or advice.
jim.pulliam said:
I am the father.
The biggest issue being able to easily have the playlists show upon the phone.
It can be accomplished with WMP by manually saving the play list as an M3u, then drag and drop that to root of the music folder on the phone, then you have to delete the auto generated WPl list from the pc in order to not have the play list show up twice in the play list list. This has to be repeated each time a change is made to the list.
Wish for WMP:
Allow you to set default play list file type.
For WMP to sync the list to the phone.
Thanks for any future help or advice.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
i use fusion media player, excellent for making/viewing/playing playlists.
i dont know what format playlists are saved as, but the playlist i made in fusion works in other media players as well, like google play music, es media player, and stock gingerbread music player app.
i never even touched the playlist files, not move them, not edit or anything, idk where the file even is and my playlists work on all above mentioned players. enjoy!
Question: Anyone recommend a music player app that will seek and find my SD Card 2? I want to load my mp3s on the secondary card but I don't want to have to click on each file each time in ES File Explorer to get them to play. None of the programs tried so far work (stock music player, MixZing or WinAmp -- WinAmp burps (FC) when I try to tell it to select that option). Running TnT-Lite-2.4.
Thanks.
Very basic player that works: Andless (in the market). It has an Explorer-like interface so you just point it to /sdcard2 and your music subfolder. It also has the added benefit of supporting FLAC files, if that's important to you.
Experimental player that is flippin' awesome but has a horrible UI, right now: Rockbox. If you're an audiophile, you probably already know this app. Amazing EQ that really REALLY makes the GTab sing when you configure it to your liking. But, the UI is a mess at the moment - takes a lot of getting used to and it doesn't quite fit the screen yet.
Rockbox beta link: http://www.rockbox.org/wiki/AndroidPort
My 800x480 compiled Rockbox, from 10/31 which I'm using on the GTab: http://www.mediafire.com/?o43jl5rj4llracm (I guess I need to update that)
I am a major music fanatic, so SQ is pretty important to me. I primarily use my 10/31 RB port with my HD600's and MiniBox E+ amp, or Andless when I just need something to run quickly and without the UI headaches.
Poweramp lets you identify folders to add to its library, including sdcard2 locations. I will admit that have not tested the response that it gives when you remove or insert different cards.
Alternatively, I did use Any Cut to make a shortcut to the Android media scanning function (Activity > Media Scanner). Normally it seems that this function only runs at boot. Running it after I've made a file update seems to allow everything to show up in the default musuc player.
I use poweramp no problems all my music is on /sdcard2
Hey there! Long time reader, first time poster!
As the title states, I'm having problems playing m4a files on my HTC One, specifically ones that are ripped from CD. I went through and updated a bunch of artists' albums with fresh Apple Lossless versions instead of the mp3s I had, and none of these rips are playing on my phone. I have a crapload of other m4a apple lossless files bought from iTunes that work just fine.. it's just these CD rips.
Anyone have any idea why? I'd love to have the better versions of these songs, and I know I can just convert them to something usable, but I want to understand what makes them not play, and if there's anything I can do in the process of ripping to fix it.
I used iTunes for all the ripping, and just selected the Apple Lossless Codec as the option. (and please, no smart-ass comments about not using iTunes It's how I buy and organize my music, since we don't have many options for online purchasing here in Canada).
Thanks!
m4a AAC vs m4a ALAC
The HTC One specs do indicate that it supports m4a, but Apple's m4a lossless (aka. ALAC) is not the same as a 'normal' m4a format. As per Wikipedia:
Apple Lossless is not a variant of AAC (which is a lossy format), but rather a distinct lossless format...
This seems to say the two formats (m4a AAC and m4a ALAC) are as different as MP3 vs FLAC media, but Apple decided to use the m4a extension for both distinct proprietary formats.
You will need a music player that has a codec that supports m4a ALAC: PowerAmp supports m4a ALAC and it is much better than the built-in HTC player or Google Music. There are others in GooglePlay store; search for 'alac'
Broo said:
The HTC One specs do indicate that it supports m4a, but Apple's m4a lossless (aka. ALAC) is not the same as a 'normal' m4a format. As per Wikipedia:
Apple Lossless is not a variant of AAC (which is a lossy format), but rather a distinct lossless format...
This seems to say the two formats (m4a AAC and m4a ALAC) are as different as MP3 vs FLAC media, but Apple decided to use the m4a extension for both distinct proprietary formats.
You will need a music player that has a codec that supports m4a ALAC: PowerAmp supports m4a ALAC and it is much better than the built-in HTC player or Google Music. There are others in GooglePlay store; search for 'alac'
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Aaaaah, thanks Broo! After reading this I went back and checked the info in iTunes for the songs that were and weren't working... for some reason I thought the purchased/downloaded were all apple lossless, but they're "Purchased AAC". I don't know how I got confused with that (it WAS 2am when I was trying to figure this out last night, lol)
I've used poweramp a bit, but wasn't crazy about it.. mayhaps I'll have to try it again.
Thanks again!
M4A file format
humangobo said:
Hey there! Long time reader, first time poster!
As the title states, I'm having problems playing m4a files on my HTC One, specifically ones that are ripped from CD. I went through and updated a bunch of artists' albums with fresh Apple Lossless versions instead of the mp3s I had, and none of these rips are playing on my phone. I have a crapload of other m4a apple lossless files bought from iTunes that work just fine.. it's just these CD rips.
Anyone have any idea why? I'd love to have the better versions of these songs, and I know I can just convert them to something usable, but I want to understand what makes them not play, and if there's anything I can do in the process of ripping to fix it.
I used iTunes for all the ripping, and just selected the Apple Lossless Codec as the option. (and please, no smart-ass comments about not using iTunes It's how I buy and organize my music, since we don't have many options for online purchasing here in Canada).
Thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I just went through this today. HTC tech support insists that even though the specifications say that the HTC One will play various formats it really requires MP3 to play correctly. My HTC One would play M4A but it would skip through the songs only playing a second or so on each one. I used iTunes to convert all of the m4a files to mp3 files and then moved them to the HTC One. They all play fine but I have not had a chance to see if it corrected the music player skipping problem. I really think the skipping problem is associated with Electromagnetic Interference since it does not happen when the phone is on my desks but it happens every time when I am outside walking around in a varying electronic environment.
Would have been nice for HTC to post some sort of notice about the MP3 issue but that would have caused problems with sales I suspect.
The conversion to MP3 is not too difficult but it is time consuming. The iTunes help will walk you through it. You can just convert them to your existing directory structure and then cut and paste into the HTC One /internal storage/Music directory but I created a different directory on my computer and then imported to there so I would not have to sort through all of the myriad iTunes/iTunesMedia/Music directories.
bennywhite said:
I just went through this today. HTC tech support insists that even though the specifications say that the HTC One will play various formats it really requires MP3 to play correctly. My HTC One would play M4A but it would skip through the songs only playing a second or so on each one. I used iTunes to convert all of the m4a files to mp3 files and then moved them to the HTC One. They all play fine but I have not had a chance to see if it corrected the music player skipping problem. I really think the skipping problem is associated with Electromagnetic Interference since it does not happen when the phone is on my desks but it happens every time when I am outside walking around in a varying electronic environment.
Would have been nice for HTC to post some sort of notice about the MP3 issue but that would have caused problems with sales I suspect.
The conversion to MP3 is not too difficult but it is time consuming. The iTunes help will walk you through it. You can just convert them to your existing directory structure and then cut and paste into the HTC One /internal storage/Music directory but I created a different directory on my computer and then imported to there so I would not have to sort through all of the myriad iTunes/iTunesMedia/Music directories.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Actually, I've managed to quickly and easily convert all those files I was having issues with to AAC versions, and they work like a charm! It's true, HTC should be a bit more specific with the file formats supported, but technically they do play m4a (all mine now work fine, since converting from ALAC codec to AAC), they just need to be a bit more specific about what codecs of m4a it'll play. Poweramp did work fine, which is awesome, but then I want to use some of the songs as ringtones or alarm sounds, and they weren't supported, thus the decision to just convert them all.. It'll save me a bit more space on the phone this way too
That's quite an odd problem you're having though, with the songs skipping... I wouldn't even know where to begin troubleshooting that! Maybe a short in your headphones? Could be sending a bad signal to the phone telling it to skip...?
HTC One Earphone Issue
humangobo said:
Actually, I've managed to quickly and easily convert all those files I was having issues with to AAC versions, and they work like a charm! It's true, HTC should be a bit more specific with the file formats supported, but technically they do play m4a (all mine now work fine, since converting from ALAC codec to AAC), they just need to be a bit more specific about what codecs of m4a it'll play. Poweramp did work fine, which is awesome, but then I want to use some of the songs as ringtones or alarm sounds, and they weren't supported, thus the decision to just convert them all.. It'll save me a bit more space on the phone this way too
That's quite an odd problem you're having though, with the songs skipping... I wouldn't even know where to begin troubleshooting that! Maybe a short in your headphones? Could be sending a bad signal to the phone telling it to skip...?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It has taken me a week to resolve this issue. Tried resolving some issues with the file structure on the phone, where the music files are stored on both the phone and in iTunes, trying working with HTC Sync Manager, uninstalled and reinstalled it, could not get it to work correctly, converted all of the files to MP3 format and finally flushed the cache. Nothing resolved the problem. This morning I changed earphones from an iPod earphone I had been using to the HTC earphone that came in the box with the HTC phone. Works as advertised.
The iPod earphone jack and the HTC earphone jack appear almost identical. However, the HTC earphone jack is about 1 mm longer than the iPod jack. Thus, it appears to me that that minor difference in earphone jack may be the problem or there is a possibility that the iPod earphone wires are not shielded and the HTC earphone wires are but I strongly suspect that it is that 1 mm of jack length difference that made the iPod phone not quite making sufficient contact and that was causing a spurious input to the music player.
bennywhite said:
It has taken me a week to resolve this issue. Tried resolving some issues with the file structure on the phone, where the music files are stored on both the phone and in iTunes, trying working with HTC Sync Manager, uninstalled and reinstalled it, could not get it to work correctly, converted all of the files to MP3 format and finally flushed the cache. Nothing resolved the problem. This morning I changed earphones from an iPod earphone I had been using to the HTC earphone that came in the box with the HTC phone. Works as advertised.
The iPod earphone jack and the HTC earphone jack appear almost identical. However, the HTC earphone jack is about 1 mm longer than the iPod jack. Thus, it appears to me that that minor difference in earphone jack may be the problem or there is a possibility that the iPod earphone wires are not shielded and the HTC earphone wires are but I strongly suspect that it is that 1 mm of jack length difference that made the iPod phone not quite making sufficient contact and that was causing a spurious input to the music player.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Aaaahh, yes had I known you were using iPod headphones, I would have said that's the culprit right away! When i first went android with the HTC One X+, I had a pair of skullcandy earbuds made for iPhone that didn't quite have the same problem as you, but were an issue nonetheless. I tried just a pair of regular headphones and worked fantastically. Since then I either get regular headphones without the mic/remote, or i just started using the HTC ones, which seem surprisingly good for a pair of packaged earbuds. Glad you got it sorted!
<edit> also, If I'm not mistaken, Apple wires theirs slightly differently, so even if the lengths were the same, the connections would be whacky and cause issues. "Think Different" they say...
humangobo said:
Hey there! Long time reader, first time poster!
As the title states, I'm having problems playing m4a files on my HTC One, specifically ones that are ripped from CD. I went through and updated a bunch of artists' albums with fresh Apple Lossless versions instead of the mp3s I had, and none of these rips are playing on my phone. I have a crapload of other m4a apple lossless files bought from iTunes that work just fine.. it's just these CD rips.
Anyone have any idea why? I'd love to have the better versions of these songs, and I know I can just convert them to something usable, but I want to understand what makes them not play, and if there's anything I can do in the process of ripping to fix it.
I used iTunes for all the ripping, and just selected the Apple Lossless Codec as the option. (and please, no smart-ass comments about not using iTunes It's how I buy and organize my music, since we don't have many options for online purchasing here in Canada).
Thanks!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you just rename the file extension to mp3 it may work. I had and m4r file which is an iPhone ringtone format and just changed the extension and my HTC One used it no bother.
Sent from my HTC One using Tapatalk 4 Beta
I have develop an android APP "CD Ripper" to rip CD to WAV or MP3 , you can try it on GOOGLE PLAY :
What's the CD Ripper
CD Ripper is the first FREE CD ripping APP of the Android.
It can rip CD tracks to lossless or compressed music files.
Why to use CD Ripper
- We have many CD discs with favorite musics
- Before , We can play them with Discman or Microsystem
- Now , We want to play those musics in mobiles
- Use the CD Ripper to rip CD tracks to WAV or MP3 files
How to use CD Ripper
- Connect the USB CD reader (Optical Drive) and power with OTG cable
- Connect the mobile to OTG cable
- Click "Load CD" to load CD
- Show CD tracks (TOC) after finish loading
- Click "Rip WAV" to rip those tracks to WAV files
- Or Click "Rip MP3" to rip those tracks to MP3 files
- Click "Save As" to save your WAV/MP3 folder with the special name