|  09-17-2012, 03:15 PM | #46 | 
| Treasure Seeker            Posts: 18,708 Karma: 26026435 Join Date: Mar 2010 Device: Kobo HD Glo, Kindles, Kindle Fires, Andriod Devices | |
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|  09-17-2012, 03:17 PM | #47 | 
| Non-Techy            Posts: 4,455 Karma: 15499273 Join Date: Feb 2011 Location: WV---USA Device: Samsung Cell Phone & Amazon Fires & Kobo eReaders | 
			
			OK Coool!  Thanks again!
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|  09-17-2012, 03:37 PM | #48 | 
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 7,007 Karma: 27060353 Join Date: Apr 2009 Location: USA Device: iPhone 15PM, Kindle Scribe, iPad mini 6, PocketBook InkPad Color 3 | 
			
			If I had to rip things to MP3 just to listen to them, I doubt that I'd even listen to audiobooks at all. Even having to use iTunes and a USB cable to get audiobooks on my iPod became so much 'friction' to me. The Audible apps have made all the difference, and I like the cloud features that Audible is finally getting around to implementing (saving bookmarks/notes/position sync between devices and with ebooks). With the iOS & Android apps, you can begin listening as soon as a few minutes of the audiobook have downloaded (wirelessly). (I'd like to see them add 1.25x speed to the playback options, 1.5x is a bit too fast.) Overall I find the ecosystem far more convenient and of much higher value to me than the alternatives that I'm aware of. Needing to manage physical media on top of that would just be wasted effort. I'd rather be reading... The only problem is that it encourages over-consumption, just as with most ebook/mp3/video ecosystems. But I think that goes with the territory for all digital media. Most of us are going to 'purchase' stuff that we'll never read, listen to, or watch—more so than with physical media. Hopefully this will be rewarded with lower costs and even more improved ecosystems. | 
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|  09-17-2012, 03:47 PM | #49 | 
| Guru            Posts: 815 Karma: 1029784 Join Date: May 2008 Location: Nebraska, USA Device: PEZ, Color Libre, 2@Sony T1, Onyx i62HD | 
			
			CatLady, if you're still around... Since you state you can't create a CD on your computer from the Audible files, are you able to create/burn a CD from other files using your computer's software? Could it be your computer and/or cd drive that is not working? AJ | 
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|  09-17-2012, 04:10 PM | #50 | 
| Addict            Posts: 283 Karma: 1011418 Join Date: Jun 2010 Device: Kindle 3, Nook Color | 
			
			Wow, I LOVE Audible. They have the biggest selection of audio books of anyone and decent prices. The user interface is the nicest of any I"ve seen. It allows, different quality sound downloads, for different devices. Also all Audible books are chapterized, so you can switch back and forth between reading and listening if desired and never lose your place.  The software has a sleep timer function on computer or IPAD and variable listening speeds. What more could anyone want? Why do you want to go back and store them on vinyl when the AAC files with the Audible features embedded are so much nicer? Dixie | 
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|  09-17-2012, 04:54 PM | #51 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 7,423 Karma: 52734361 Join Date: Oct 2010 Device: Kindle Fire, Kindle Paperwhite, AGPTek Bluetooth Clip | Quote: 
 Now I can't even play any of the book files through the Audible Manager. All the book names there have turned red, with a "prohibited" symbol. What that means, and why it's there, and how I get rid of it, I have no idea. I didn't do anything but open the program. I can play the files through WMP, so it's not like it's some huge problem, but it's an annoyance nevertheless, because it happened on its own. | |
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|  09-17-2012, 04:56 PM | #52 | 
| Banned            Posts: 1,118 Karma: 3111746 Join Date: Oct 2011 Device: Kindle & little green monster | |
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|  09-17-2012, 05:54 PM | #53 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 3,144 Karma: 8426142 Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: Chicago, IL Device: Kindle PW2, Kindle Voyage, Kindle DXG, Boox M90, Kobo Aura HD | 
			
			I would think that most Audible users are not trying to burn books to CD, and are thus coming across this problem. As to why iTunes is crashing for the OP, that is an entirely different issue. I suspect iTunes is not as stable on Windows machines as it is on Macs. | 
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|  09-17-2012, 05:56 PM | #54 | 
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 7,423 Karma: 52734361 Join Date: Oct 2010 Device: Kindle Fire, Kindle Paperwhite, AGPTek Bluetooth Clip | |
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|  09-17-2012, 09:11 PM | #55 | |
| Treasure Seeker            Posts: 18,708 Karma: 26026435 Join Date: Mar 2010 Device: Kobo HD Glo, Kindles, Kindle Fires, Andriod Devices | Quote: 
 I suggest to the OP to try the other method mentioned in this thread. It works but keep in mind unless you are using the Enhanced version which is locked but in compatible devices or Audible Manager. All Audiobooks are in Mono. Yuck! Only the Enhanced Version is in stereo 64kbps. Version 4 to me sounds horrible because it's 32kbps mono. I have no clue which version iTunes uses though. | |
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|  09-17-2012, 11:14 PM | #56 | ||
| Surfin the alpha waves ~~            Posts: 26,744 Karma: 459765791 Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: New Jersey Device: Jetbook Lite & Mini, Nook STR, Kobo, Hanvon N516, Kindle 2, Androids | Quote: 
 Quote: 
 I use CD-RWs all of the time for critical audio recordings, but I read the data off the CD-RW within a day or two of recording it. I know of no computer DVD/CD drives that have trouble reading or writing to CD-RWs. As I said, this is critical music restoraion work, but I have been doing it this way for nearly ten years and have never had a problem of any sort with CD-RW quality that would cause me to use a CD-R instead. I also subscribed to Audible, probably 7 or 8 years ago -- for recordings of the Says You radio game show. I recorded every one to CD-RW in WAV format (just what Catlady is trying to do -- Audible permitted it). I then read the WAV files back in and converted them to MP3s to listen on my Creative Nomad Jukebox 2. I don't know why Catlady has been encountering problems, but she is right: Audible allows burning their files to CDs (both CD-R and CD-RW) and, once burned to a disc, there is no law in the US that would prohibit her from changing the format for her own use. Catlady, when I subscribed to Audible they permitted burning directly from their own software. Apparently, that is no longer the case. Since you are attempting to burn to a CD, which they permit, I would not hesitate to contact their user support, and escalate if necessary. | ||
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|  09-17-2012, 11:33 PM | #57 | |
| You kids get off my lawn!            Posts: 4,220 Karma: 73492664 Join Date: Aug 2007 Location: Columbus, Ohio Device: Oasis 2 and Libra H2O and half a dozen older models I can't let go of | Quote: 
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|  09-18-2012, 01:20 AM | #58 | 
| Plan B Is Now In Force            Posts: 1,894 Karma: 8086979 Join Date: Jan 2010 Location: Surebleak Device: Aluratek,Sony 350/T1,Pandigital,eBM 911,Nook HD/HD+,Fire HDX 7/8.9,PW2 | 
			
			I've found that it's best to run Audible Manager as an administrator; otherwise I was getting the red-x'd files with the current version of it. When I first became an Audible member, I tried the burn-to-CD then rip-it-to-MP3, and it worked but it just took way too many discs to make it worth bothering with. I've got a program that will convert the Audible format to MP3, but with a Vista computer it's a 1:1 transfer rate so that takes hours and hours, depending on the size of the audiobook. I now just download the Audible files to my Sansa Fuze MP3 player and either listen to the audiobooks via headphones, or else in my car using a line input plug. If I want the book in MP3 format, I'll buy it on sale at Audibookstand.com in CD format and rip that. Or else I'll buy a used audiobook CD and rip that. | 
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|  09-18-2012, 01:41 AM | #59 | 
| Old & Busted Hotness            Posts: 182 Karma: 1290260 Join Date: Apr 2012 Device: Samsung Galaxy Note 8.0,Asus TF700T, K1-2-3-Fire | 
			
			Long time Aubible member here but now I also use http://www.Podiobooks.com because I grew weary of the hoops from Audible and it's ever bloating file sizes and increasing inflexibility.  Too old, too worn out to keep on that treadmill.  Podiobooks is not typical mainstream but I find a lot of fun content there.  I discovered The Leviathan Chronicles and some other SF titles which were lots of fun. I still like Audible's offerings but every time I turn around there are issues, limits and frustrations. Pretty much all of which came under Amazon's ownship of Audible. | 
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|  09-18-2012, 01:47 AM | #60 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 7,423 Karma: 52734361 Join Date: Oct 2010 Device: Kindle Fire, Kindle Paperwhite, AGPTek Bluetooth Clip | Quote: 
 Since I can play the files in WMP and iTunes, I haven't been too concerned. I imagine I would need to do a reinstall and/or redownload the audio files. But right now I'm in let-it-be mode. | |
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