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I'm not sure if this is the right place for this question, but I've recently ripped some game music into .AUS format. How can I convert .AUS files into WAV or MP3 files? Thanks!
Jam it back in, in the dark. |
Gawd, I'm about to pull my f***ing hair out right now.
Does anyone know of a good alternative to Audacity? I'm ripping files from a couple games, and most of them convert from WAV to MP3 just fine in Audacity. But there are these weird few that absolutely won't compute in Audacity, for no reason at all. I tried changing disk writers in Winamp, but with the exact same result. So the problem is with Audacity. Anyone know of any good substitutes? (I'm using Audacity to convert these WAV files to MP3 as well as to give them a 5-second fade-out at the end.) There's nowhere I can't reach. |
EDIT: Ack!! Okay, I found a copy of dBpowerAMP that I could download--but it doesn't work right. When it asks for files to convert, and I go to the folder with my WAV files I want to convert...nothing comes up. It can't bring up WAV files! What gives? How do I make it bring up and convert WAV files? Basically, I need a program that functions exactly like Audacity. =( This thing is sticky, and I don't like it. I don't appreciate it.
Last edited by Rew; Mar 1, 2008 at 01:12 PM.
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Thanks, everyone! Actually, I figured out a different sort of trick. The WAV files that would go nowhere in Audacity I opened in iTunes instead and converted them to MP3. Their sound quality remained intact, and this time, as MP3 files, I was able to play them in Audacity and do the five-second fadeouts that I wanted. So all that to say, problem solved!
Moguta: What was weird is that I couldn't find any commonality at all among the WAV files that Audacity wouldn't take. Tracks from literally the same folder of a game would convert splendidly, while a stubborn few just wouldn't at all, and no error messages were given either. Oh well. At least that's over with now. =0) Most amazing jew boots |