![]() For a CD, you simply insert the CD in your Mac’s optical drive and then click on Import CD an Import CD screen (see image at right) will appear with the CD name at the top and the tracks listed at the bottom. This is where you tell Audiobook Builder where to get the book’s audio. It also lets you create true audiobook files out of audio files already on your hard drive for example, tracks you previously ripped from a CD.Ĭlick the right-arrow button, or the Chapters button, to move to the Chapters screen. This handy utility automates the process from beginning to end. An easier-and faster-alternative is Splasm’s Audiobook Builder 1.0.7 ( single user, $10 family pack, $15). But that’s a hassle if you’re an avid book listener. You can rip your audiobook CDs in iTunes and then spend some time massaging the resulting audio files into formats that work like audiobooks in fact, we recentlyĮxplained the process. But the popularity of the iPod (and other portable media players) has led to a common question from Macworld readers: How do I get my CD audiobooks onto my iPod so everything works correctly?ěy correctly, the reader usually means getting those tracks to show up under Audiobooks rather than Music, keeping the book’s chapters together, letting you navigate between chapters, and allowing bookmarking. Although “Books On Tape” may be a relic of an earlier decade, CD-based audiobooks are still quite popular.
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