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derebey07
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Joined: 01/29/2011 - 14:36
Uploading Music

I'm in the midst of learning this program and am trying to upload learning tapes.  I use a Mac Book Pro and therefore all of my music files are in I tunes.  The I tunes format is an M4a which this program does not recognize.  Does ANYONE hae any clue how to 1) upload music from I tunes or 2) change the format of the files from M4a to Mp3 OR upload the music directly from disk to the program?     I am stuck.   Help!

 

Steve Derebey

2nd City Chorus Rockford Metro

IanHarrop
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Joined: 12/15/2010 - 07:59
When I first set up my site I

When I first set up my site I believe that I followed the instructions found here and it worked:

http://www.groupanizer.com/feature-repertoire

Ian Harrop
Western Hospitality Singers www.sing4fun.ca
Alberta Sport Parachuting Association www.aspa.ca
ian.harrop@live.com

derebey07
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Joined: 01/29/2011 - 14:36
iTunes: How to convert a song

iTunes: How to convert a song to a different file format

 

            Last Modified:December 19, 2008

            Article:HT1550

            Old Article:93123

 

 

Summary

You can convert a song to a different file format while keeping a copy of the original. For example, you can save a copy of an uncompressed song file such as AIFF or WAV to a compressed format like MP3, AAC, or Apple Lossless Encoder.

Products Affected

iTunes

Saving a copy of a song in a new file format

When converting from a compressed to uncompressed file format (for example, from MP3 to AIFF) you shouldn't notice any reduction in sound quality. However, when converting between compressed formats (for example MP3 and AAC), you may notice a reduction in the sound quality. For the best results, if you want your music encoded in a different file format, you should import the music again from the original source using the new encoding format.

To convert a song's file format:

  1. Open iTunes Preferences. 
Windows: Choose Edit > Preferences. 
Mac: Choose iTunes > Preferences.
  2. Click the General button, then click the Importing Settings button in the second section of the window.
  3. From the Import Using pop-up menu, choose the encoding format that you want to convert the song to, then click OK to save the settings.
  4. Select one or more songs in your library, then from the Advanced menu, choose one of the following (The menu item changes to show what's selected in your Importing preferences):
  5.  
  6. Create MP3 version
  7. Create AAC version
  8. Create AIFF version
  9. Create WAV version
  10. Create Apple Lossless version

If you haven't imported some songs into iTunes yet, you can import and convert them at the same time. This will create a converted copy of the file in your iTunes Library based on your iTunes preferences. To convert all the songs in a folder or on a disk, hold down the Option key (Mac) or Shift key (Windows) and choose Advanced > Convert Import preference setting. The Import preference setting will match what you chose in step 3. iTunes will prompt you for the location of the folder or disk you want to import and convert. All the songs in the folder or on the disk will be converted. Note: Some purchased songs are encoded using a protected AAC format that prevents them from being converted. iTunes Plus purchases are not protected and can be converted.

The song in its original format and the newly converted song appear in your library.

Additional Information

About compression

When you convert a song, some data may be lost due to the way certain formats compress data. For this reason these formats are sometimes called "lossy" formats. The advantage of using a "lossy" format is that the file sizes are much smaller, which means you can store more songs in the same amount of disk space. The disadvantage is that the sound quality may not be as good as the original, uncompressed format. Depending on the song, the speakers or headphones, and the player you use to play the song, you may not be able to tell the difference between a compressed "lossy" song and a song that is not compressed.

Once a song is compressed (meaning some of its data is lost) you cannot retrieve the data by uncompressing it. If you convert a song from a "lossy" format to a uncompressed format, the quality of the song will not improve and the file will only take up more disk space. For example, if you convert a song in MP3 format (a compressed format) to AIFF (an uncompressed format) the song will take up much more space on the hard disk, but it will still sound the same as the compressed file. In order to take advantage of uncompressed formats you should only import songs using these formats.Thanks Ian!   I actually figured it out last night (after a LOT of experimenting and trips down dark alleys!)   Found this:

 

Gadget424
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Joined: 09/09/2010 - 20:52
Admin> Site Configuration>

Admin> Site Configuration> File Uploads> Add m4a and any other extensions you need not already listed in the "Default permitted file extensions" field> Click Save Configuration.

Edit: You might want to do the above for all three sections - General, Member and Site Admin, just in case.

Phil Owen
Central Standard Webmaster & Marketing VP

admin
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Joined: 04/22/2012 - 08:04
There's a "default" that

There's a "default" that covers them all - that's the only one I ever edit.

valmuir
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Joined: 05/27/2011 - 03:31
Has anyone had any success in

Has anyone had any success in uploading mp3 files with ftp using site to site transfer? I have a bunch of stuff in a members' area on our website which I would like to transfer to Groupanizer and although I also have it on my own computer I'm sure it would be faster to transfer it directly across.

At the moment I have the 2 sites open successfully in an ftp program that allows site to site transfers but the transfer just won't work. Normal uploads are working fine but my upload speed is so SLOW!

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