Quote:
Originally Posted by hobnail
The only audiobooks I've listened to, years ago, were ones that I bought on CD. So I don't know anything about DRM for audiobooks. But I was thinking that if your audiobooks don't have DRM you could pull them into an audio editing program and "fix" them. Audacity is what I've used for other things. It has gain equalization and other gizmos that might help.
I used to listen to audiobooks when driving on long trips. At that time I had a pickup truck and it was noisy and it was very apparent when the audio had been done poorly; some authors would mostly talk quietly and then practically yell for emphasis, so if I turned it up for the majority it would be blaring when they got loud. It really needed some sort of equalization during the production.
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Thanks for the advice and the anecdote. Some audiobooks have all chapters in one mp3 file or m4a file. I think your advice suits well those types.