Second, is a nice feature where you can name the newly converted files based on the metadata (tags) with the audio files. It’s pretty self-explanatory as you can put the new files in the same folder as the original files are into a folder of your choosing, you can also choose to delete the original file once that the conversion is done. The first option is whether to place the converted audio files. In this screen you’ll have multiple options: To convert a file, for example from wma to mp3 just start it, multimedia -> soundconverter or write soundconverter in a terminal, you’ll see a very basic windows like this one:Īs first thing click on options you’ll see a windows like this one: Or as alternative you can use Ubuntu Software Center. In my Ubuntu 12.04 i see that in the repository is available the version 1.5.4-1, so you can install it simply with a Soundconverter is usually available in all the repository of the major distributions. is capable of processing many files with ease, CPU usage reduced.is very fast and uses multithreaded conversion.is simple to use, with an intuitive interface.It reads anything GStreamer can read (Ogg Vorbis, AAC, MP3, FLAC, WAV, AVI, MPEG, MOV, M4A, AC3, DTS, ALAC, MPC, Shorten, APE, SID, MOD, XM, S3M, etc…), and writes to WAV, FLAC, MP3, AAC, and Ogg Vorbis files. SoundConverter is an audio file converter for the GNOME Desktop. It’s useful sometime to convert some type of audio files in another, and perhaps you don’t want to search for the correct command to use from the terminal, don’t worry there is a small and nice application that can do this for you: soundconverter
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