No, it's sitting idle. Another thing I have noticed is that 2 "MusicConverter" processes are running (but neither does anything). Could this be to do with the issue, or just the fact I have a duel core processor?
I have about 1tb of flac files and wish to convert them to apple lossless. I ran through them and they convert and play fine on the local machine. When I play them on another machine via the shared function in iTunes they will not play. Any ideas? I know a similiar issue existed for the mac only program called MAX which they resolved with their latest release.
I believe the mp4 Optimize utility codec also re-orders some of the meta-data so that iTunes can stream it. I remember this being mentioned at some point, but I am unsure of exactly where it was.
I have a "slight" problem with dMC12. I have a lot of (~5000) ape, flac and wav files, which I tried to convert to m4a with Batch Converter (XPS2, dMC12, newest FLAC/APE/M4A codecs). After a thousand or so, dMC12 started to produce little windows stating there was a "Core Converter Crash". It also appeared in the error list. Unfortunately, I made the conversion with deleting the old files, which was done for certain files, but not for others.
My Windows is Hungarian (HU - hun). Codepage problems in filename handling were present in previous versions of Windows (even between different versions such as 98 and 2K) and different filesystems (FAT/NTFS - CDFS), so I presume this is only a version of the same. The problem is rather disturbing, because at the moment it just completely screwed up my collection (I have to manually check some 250 CDs worth of stuff, lost tags, not playable files etc.).
I strongly suggest a warning note that the codec may cause such problems on non-English Windows. Most of the people who buy this software do so because they have a lot of files to convert, and those who use lossless formats are probably even more keen to keep things tidy. I - for one thing - will definitely not use dMC again on my collection for batch conversions. Regrabbing hundreds of CDs takes days - or rather weeks if you also eat, sleep or, not to mention, work during the time - is not acceptable...
Regarding iTunes, try installing the m4a utility codecs and running the "m4a optimize" on your files. Also, make sure the "Create RTP Hint" is checked on the m4a codec window.
dMC r12 is fully Unicode compatible. I believe the tags are also Unicode-compatible, but I may be mistaken. Alternatively, the problem may lie with the Nero .exe encoder itself.
Also, the "Delete Source Files" is very risky to use, for the reasons you mentioned.
I have a question that I'm surprised the other performance-squeezing folks out there haven't asked (or at least I haven't found yet browsing the forum).
In the ZIP file we get from Nero, there's one encoder labeled "neroAacEnc_SSE2.exe". At first I was thinking this was a build that took advantage of SSE2, but considering most computers these days support that and newer, perhaps it's a build for machines that DON'T support SSE2. Any comments?
Either way, I'd think things would be more efficient if using the proper build for your processor.
You can simply rename the _SSE2 encoder and take out the _SSE2 part and dMC will use that encoder.
As for whether it is the encoder with or without SSE, I believe it is the one with SSE2. While all Intel machines since about 2000 and all AMD machines since about 2-3 years ago support it, there are still machines that do not support it. Therefore, it is better to play it safe and assume people do not have it.
dBpoweramp-Codec-aac-encoder.exe and dBpoweramp-Codec-m4a.exe Crash when I try to install them? I get "windows has encountered a problem and needs to close" bla bla bla bla. AppName: explorer.exe AppVer: 6.0.2900.2180 ModName: cryptnet.dll
ModVer: 5.131.2600.2180 Offset: 00007103
I just installed dBpoweramp Reference. The previous version worked great...do I need a refund? This is frigging annoying!
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