Re: Does Itunes replace or make copies of files it converts fromwma to aac?

2013-01-03 Thread Aidan Maher
The aac they talk about is not o g g, but A A c.

On 03/01/2013, Gary Schindler garys5...@comcast.net wrote:
 m4a IS A CONTAINER THAT HOLDS THE aac FILE
 - Original Message -
 From: Christopher Chaltain chalt...@gmail.com
 To: PC Audio Discussion List pc-audio@pc-audio.org
 Sent: Wednesday, January 02, 2013 4:17 PM
 Subject: Re: Does Itunes replace or make copies of files it converts fromwma

 to aac?


 I thought they were the same, i.e. M4A is just an Apple proprietary
 wrapper around the open AAC format. I'd have to look it up myself as well.

 On 02/01/13 15:10, Robert Logue wrote:
 I haven't found a setting for how they are converted.  The dialog said
 they would convert to .aac.  But they convert to .m4a instead.  I know I
 can look this up but is that even the same?

 Bob

 On 12/31/2012 12:33 AM, André van Deventer wrote:
 Just wondering something else about this.

 I converted my music library to itunes but for some reason  the wma
 lossless
 format is converted to 256 kbps m4a files.  Not nice at all.  Is there a
 setting somewhere which I can tell itunes to do the conversion to
 lossless
 format?



 -Original Message-
 From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of
 Christopher Chaltain
 Sent: 31 December 2012 04:57 AM
 To: PC Audio Discussion List
 Subject: Re: Does Itunes replace or make copies of files it converts
 from
 wma to aac?

 iTunes leaves your original WMA file alone. I haven't done this
 myself, but
 I found this on the web page
 http://www.apple.com/findouthow/music/itunes.html#management-convertwma

 Since WMA is a MS proprietary format, requiring Apple to pay MS a
 license,
 I'm surprised they do anything with WMA files at all.

 On 12/30/2012 06:46 PM, Robert Logue wrote:
 A bit of ranting here.  Sorry about that.

 Does Itunes replace or make copies of files it converts from wma to
 aac?
 I've searched the web for this answer but did not find out.  Hope
 someone here knows.

 I just installed the latest Itunes.  I wanted to add music from
 another drive using add folder to library.

 iTunes
 One or more of the songs you are adding to iTunes, including “01
 graphic
 870  Rubber Bullets [Long Version].wma”, are in the WMA format.
 iTunes will automatically convert them to the AAC format so that they
 can be added to your iTunes library.
 Convert Skip

 I accidently hit escape twice when leaving  the Jaws virtual viewer
 and missed being able to hit the skip button.  Itunes started
 processing the library even though I pressed escape?  I don't know if
 it was skipping or processing all those .wma files.  Looks like it
 didn't start converting because there were no .aac files found in the
 folder when I looked with Windows Explorer search.

 I'd thought I'd forgotton to turn on restore previous versions for
 that drive after reinstalling Windows 7. I couldn't find a previous
 version for the folder.  However, I did find previous versions in the
 drive's properties.

 I searched for all .aac files on my system and only found one very old.
I right clicked and open with which was not a menu but opened a
 dialog that was hard to work with Jaws.  I finally got it to see
 Itunes but accidently hit enter before unchecking always use this
 program to open this type.  Itunes didn't open.  Now when I right
 click that file the open with is a sub menu with Windows Media Player
 and Itunes in it. Also choose default program.  So, I screwed up once
 again.  Makes a grown man weap!


 I can't believe they would make it hard to import wma files.  I have
 so many I don't want to convert.  I'll have to back them up first.  I
 hate software that makes me choose without preperation.

 Itunes already sucks!

 Can't I keep Itunes from damaging or changing my origenal wma files?
 If I check this; Copy files to iTunes Media folder when adding to
 library, will it make converted copies and place them in the Itunes
 folder leaving the origenal wma files in their place?

 Advanced Preferences
 iTunes Media folder location
 C:\Users\Robert Logue\Music\iTunes\iTunes Media Change...
 Reset
 Keep iTunes Media folder organized
 Places files into album and artist folders, and names the files based
 on the disc number, track number, and the song title.
 Copy files to iTunes Media folder when adding to library


 To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
 pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org

 --
 Christopher (CJ)
 chaltain at Gmail

 To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
 pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org



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 --
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 chaltain at Gmail

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 pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org


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Re: Does Itunes replace or make copies of files it converts fromwma to aac?

2013-01-02 Thread Gary Schindler

m4a IS A CONTAINER THAT HOLDS THE aac FILE
- Original Message - 
From: Christopher Chaltain chalt...@gmail.com

To: PC Audio Discussion List pc-audio@pc-audio.org
Sent: Wednesday, January 02, 2013 4:17 PM
Subject: Re: Does Itunes replace or make copies of files it converts fromwma 
to aac?



I thought they were the same, i.e. M4A is just an Apple proprietary
wrapper around the open AAC format. I'd have to look it up myself as well.

On 02/01/13 15:10, Robert Logue wrote:

I haven't found a setting for how they are converted.  The dialog said
they would convert to .aac.  But they convert to .m4a instead.  I know I
can look this up but is that even the same?

Bob

On 12/31/2012 12:33 AM, André van Deventer wrote:

Just wondering something else about this.

I converted my music library to itunes but for some reason  the wma
lossless
format is converted to 256 kbps m4a files.  Not nice at all.  Is there a
setting somewhere which I can tell itunes to do the conversion to
lossless
format?



-Original Message-
From: Pc-audio [mailto:pc-audio-boun...@pc-audio.org] On Behalf Of
Christopher Chaltain
Sent: 31 December 2012 04:57 AM
To: PC Audio Discussion List
Subject: Re: Does Itunes replace or make copies of files it converts from
wma to aac?

iTunes leaves your original WMA file alone. I haven't done this
myself, but
I found this on the web page
http://www.apple.com/findouthow/music/itunes.html#management-convertwma

Since WMA is a MS proprietary format, requiring Apple to pay MS a
license,
I'm surprised they do anything with WMA files at all.

On 12/30/2012 06:46 PM, Robert Logue wrote:

A bit of ranting here.  Sorry about that.

Does Itunes replace or make copies of files it converts from wma to aac?
I've searched the web for this answer but did not find out.  Hope
someone here knows.

I just installed the latest Itunes.  I wanted to add music from
another drive using add folder to library.

iTunes
One or more of the songs you are adding to iTunes, including “01
graphic
870  Rubber Bullets [Long Version].wma”, are in the WMA format.
iTunes will automatically convert them to the AAC format so that they
can be added to your iTunes library.
Convert Skip

I accidently hit escape twice when leaving  the Jaws virtual viewer
and missed being able to hit the skip button.  Itunes started
processing the library even though I pressed escape?  I don't know if
it was skipping or processing all those .wma files.  Looks like it
didn't start converting because there were no .aac files found in the
folder when I looked with Windows Explorer search.

I'd thought I'd forgotton to turn on restore previous versions for
that drive after reinstalling Windows 7. I couldn't find a previous
version for the folder.  However, I did find previous versions in the
drive's properties.

I searched for all .aac files on my system and only found one very old.
   I right clicked and open with which was not a menu but opened a
dialog that was hard to work with Jaws.  I finally got it to see
Itunes but accidently hit enter before unchecking always use this
program to open this type.  Itunes didn't open.  Now when I right
click that file the open with is a sub menu with Windows Media Player
and Itunes in it. Also choose default program.  So, I screwed up once
again.  Makes a grown man weap!


I can't believe they would make it hard to import wma files.  I have
so many I don't want to convert.  I'll have to back them up first.  I
hate software that makes me choose without preperation.

Itunes already sucks!

Can't I keep Itunes from damaging or changing my origenal wma files?
If I check this; Copy files to iTunes Media folder when adding to
library, will it make converted copies and place them in the Itunes
folder leaving the origenal wma files in their place?

Advanced Preferences
iTunes Media folder location
C:\Users\Robert Logue\Music\iTunes\iTunes Media Change...
Reset
Keep iTunes Media folder organized
Places files into album and artist folders, and names the files based
on the disc number, track number, and the song title.
Copy files to iTunes Media folder when adding to library


To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org


--
Christopher (CJ)
chaltain at Gmail

To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org



To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org



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pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org


--
Christopher (CJ)
chaltain at Gmail

To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
pc-audio-unsubscr...@pc-audio.org 



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