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Mac OS X  |  Audio / Video  |  Editors  |  MP3 Trimmer  |  good for mp3 no good for mp4 or aac

MP3 Trimmer

MP3 Trimmer

Edit MP3s without re-encoding.

Version:  2.9.3

   [ Views: 910 ]

good for mp3 no good for mp4 or aac

Feedback Type:  Review

Contributed by: interactivephotos Monday, May 31 2004 @ 12:09 AM PDT

Product Platform: MacOS,MacOSX

Used Product For: 1-6 months

Recommend Product: NO

I was a bit disappointed because I converted my whole library to AAC (MP4) files and wanted to go back and do some trimming. I could not as this product does not work on AAC audio files. I am pretty sure that most iTunes files are AAC. I would love to see this product include support for AAC files. I think with this it would be a great product. Well worth the fee.   
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Comments

4 comments |

good for mp3 no good for mp4 or aac - Jeff Mincey

iTunes can encode in MP3 format as easily as in AAC (as well as play back in both formats).

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Saturday, June 19 2004 @ 01:02 PM PDT


good for mp3 no good for mp4 or aac - slboettcher

Hey dumbass - look at the name of the product...MP3 is obvious to my 11 year old, why not you?

SB

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Monday, June 21 2004 @ 10:25 AM PDT


good for mp3 no good for mp4 or aac - Fuchal

I think I speak for everyone when I say:

I'm surprised you have a child.

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Monday, June 21 2004 @ 11:13 AM PDT


good for mp3 no good for mp4 or aac - Macsure

Why on earth would anyone convert their entire MP3 library to AAC? It looks like the music industry has not only forced Apple to release a "more compliant" file format to suit their profit-taking, but MANY seem NOT to notice that converting MP3s to AAC does nothing to improve quality. MP3s are "lossy compression" files, so data removed during the compression is NEVER restored, no matter how "lossless" the new format. Unless one has some technical reason, such as editing in AAC, it's pointless except to increase the disk space taken up by AAC vs MP3.

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Saturday, July 03 2004 @ 12:07 PM PDT