flac to Ipod?

daniel_paul_
daniel_paul_ Posts: 189
edited June 2008 in Electronics
I have my music saved mostly as Flac and a very few as WMP files. My wife wants to put a bunch on her Ipod. How do I convert the selected files to Ipod format? The goal being to reduce the size of the files. Please keep in mind that I do not want to delete the source files. I am running windows XP.

FYI: I will be back on line in the morning.

Thanks, Dan
Post edited by daniel_paul_ on

Comments

  • fatchowmein
    fatchowmein Posts: 2,637
    edited June 2008
    You'll have to convert them to apple lossless. I have the same problem. I would love to keep everything in flac (squeezebox 3) but my wife is an ipod lover.

    http://www.dbpoweramp.com/dmc.htm

    The other option is to reimage her ipod and turn it into a flac player. Sorry, I don't have that information and I have never attempted the procedure.
  • mmadden28
    mmadden28 Posts: 4,283
    edited June 2008
    You could convert them to mp3 them import them to iTunes.
    MediaMonkey supports FLAC and can convert although I think you have to have the upgraded version ($).

    You could convert the FLAC back to CD and them rip into iTunes.

    I was able to use the FLAC Frontend (free) and decode a FLAC file to a WAV file, then bring that into iTunes and convert to MP3-Its a little work but not too painful. Only took me about 5 mins to completely convert about an hour of music from FLAC to MP3.
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  • daniel_paul_
    daniel_paul_ Posts: 189
    edited June 2008
    If I use the Flac Frontend to wav wont I lose the tags?
  • Marty913
    Marty913 Posts: 760
    edited June 2008
    I have my music saved mostly as Flac and a very few as WMP files. My wife wants to put a bunch on her Ipod. How do I convert the selected files to Ipod format? The goal being to reduce the size of the files. Please keep in mind that I do not want to delete the source files. I am running windows XP.

    FYI: I will be back on line in the morning.

    Thanks, Dan

    The free version of MediaMonkey will convert FLAC directly to MP3 which can then be used in the IPod. I just converted a couple to confirm so if you need help just PM me.
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  • jpolz
    jpolz Posts: 15
    edited June 2008
    The way I do it is burn the FLAC files to an audio CD image using Nero, then I mount the CD image to a virtual drive using Alcohol 120%. That way iTunes will grab the CD title/name info automatically.

    All my iTunes library is ripped using AAC @ 256kbps, which is much better than MP3 at the same bitrate.
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  • unc2701
    unc2701 Posts: 3,587
    edited June 2008
    OK, DON'T put them to MP3, you'll lose the CD quality and you can't get it back. Same thing for lossy AAC. Since you've got them as flac's, I'm guessing that you have the original CD's, so the easiest way is to just re-rip in iTunes.

    I believe that the newer versions of Roxio Toast have FLAC and apple lossless support, so you could use that to convert over.

    Now, I'm assuming that you want to keep it lossless. If you have the space, you could just duplicate your library in an MP3/ AAC format for your wife's Ipod since the quality out of it isn't going to be too hot anyway.
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  • daniel_paul_
    daniel_paul_ Posts: 189
    edited June 2008
    unc2701 wrote: »
    OK, DON'T put them to MP3, you'll lose the CD quality and you can't get it back. Same thing for lossy AAC. Since you've got them as flac's, I'm guessing that you have the original CD's, so the easiest way is to just re-rip in iTunes.

    I believe that the newer versions of Roxio Toast have FLAC and apple lossless support, so you could use that to convert over.

    Now, I'm assuming that you want to keep it lossless. If you have the space, you could just duplicate your library in an MP3/ AAC format for your wife's Ipod since the quality out of it isn't going to be too hot anyway.


    The goal is to do this quickly. I have spent months ripping the cd to flac. I am not doing this again! I am over 5000 songs and like 350 differnt cds. I do not care about the quality because I am keeping the Flac files. This is just for her headphones.
  • Marty913
    Marty913 Posts: 760
    edited June 2008
    The goal is to do this quickly. I have spent months ripping the cd to flac. I am not doing this again! I am over 5000 songs and like 350 differnt cds. I do not care about the quality because I am keeping the Flac files. This is just for her headphones.

    Dan.

    I PM'd you details on doing it with MediaMonkey. No reason to re-rip, destroy originals, lose TAG info. 10 or 15 seconds a song and you're done. If you don't like the results, do it again. FLAC to MP3 the into ITunes is pretty simple stuff.
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  • fatchowmein
    fatchowmein Posts: 2,637
    edited June 2008
    The goal is to do this quickly. I have spent months ripping the cd to flac. I am not doing this again! I am over 5000 songs and like 350 differnt cds. I do not care about the quality because I am keeping the Flac files. This is just for her headphones.

    dbpoweramp has a "Batch Convert" option. Let's say all your music is in a "Music" folder, separated by artist folder. Just point batch convert to the music folder, click on the subfolder option, and it will list every flac song. Click one button to start and walk away (you can change the option to output to the original folder or elsewhere). Once done, point itunes to the music folder and it will pick up anything that's not flac.

    Like Media Monkey, all conversions are free except when converting to mp3. You have to pay for that portion of the software. Apple lossless (m4a), apple (mp4), ogg, ra, wma, flac, ape, etc are all free.

    Good luck
  • adam2434
    adam2434 Posts: 995
    edited June 2008
    In my opinion, a high bitrate mp3 (say lame vbr 0, which is around 250 kbps) is good enough for most portable applications unless you're doing critical listening with high end headphones.

    I use Foobar to convert my flac files to lame vbr 0 mp3's for my Zune and use the flac files for home listening (using Foobar for the player). The mp3's will keep all the tag data you had in the flac's. It's nice having one piece of software for playback and conversion. The only other software I use is EAC to rip CD's to flac.

    One advantage of mp3 is that it is a universal format that will play on any portable or software.

    Foobar is free and so are the flac and lame codecs.
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