I used iTunes to copy songs off the VBS CD, which encoded them in AAC format (M4A container). My video editor doesn’t accept that format, so I needed to convert them to mp3. After trying lots of programs that Google offered me, many of which claimed to be “free” but were really just “free trials”, I finally found the solution in a forum post. It turns out that you can do the conversion right in iTunes, totally free and totally cool.
1. Go into iTunes Preferences, and change the importing mode back to the MP3 mode you like
2. Now select the tracks that you want to change back, and go to the Advanced menu. There is an item called “convert selection to MP3“.
This menu item lists whatever the current setting is in the importing prefs.
Now, this might not be good for the audio quality, but I don’t really care: I don’t listen to music that carefully. Thanks, Hannah W!
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Thanks a lot for the post! It works!
Help! I’ve downloaded tunebite but for some reason when I try to add music files to the tunebite library to be converted, it wont let me. I tried with itunes M4As, and also with regular mp3s as a mvas as a test, and still nothing. Does anyone know what is happening and how I can fix it?
Elsa, why are you using tunebite? iTunes can convert M4A to mp3.
Elliot,
THANK YOU, THANK YOU, THANK YOU! This has saved a whole lot of time and effort!
You are really savvy! Thanks it worked like a charm!
if the aac is protected, i mean if it is in m4p format, iTunes cannot convert it any more.
a friend of mine uses a virtual burner program called NoteBurner to burn the itunes music, both in m4a and m4p format, on an virtual audio CD and the program can rip the burned music back to your hard drive automatically. It is very convenient