

#Audiobook builder app Pc
I do not know if there is a PC equivalent, but it works well on a Mac. My husband, the utmost in all things tech support, did a little investigating and after we both slaved over trying to trick iTunes into doing what it used to do with no problem, he came across an app recommendation. I couldn't face listening to the five audiobooks I'd most recently downloaded at 1x speed! I almost always listen to audiobooks at 1.5x-2x speed, because the normal speed is slower than my brain works. The beauty of the audiobook media type is that it gives you more options - saving your place, and even more important - the ability to speed it up. But that puts the files in the shuffle, and doesn't keep track of where you are in the audiobook. Why does this matter? It's true I could still put an audiobook-as-music-album into iTunes and onto my iPhone and listen to it, somewhat. I had read and write access to the files, there did not seem to be any type of DRM control on the files, but yet I could still not convert them to audiobooks. In an earlier version of iTunes I figured out that if I first converted the files to the system default, AAC, then I could convert to audiobook. In the past, all I had to do was select all tracks, select Get Info, and change the media type from music to audiobook (since iTunes imports as music by default.) Suddenly, that stopped working.

I often get audiobooks as MP3 files from publishers, or ripped from an MP3 CD. Ever since updating to iTunes 12, I have had an impossible time trying to get MP3 files to work as audiobooks. I'm not much of a complainer, but it drives me crazy when applications like iTunes get worse after an update.
