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Updated Wednesday, November 9th, 2005 at 12:00am

Turning MP3 audiobooks into iPod audiobooks

The best feature of the iPod’s audiobook format is the ability to resume playback at a particular point even if you play something else or turn the iPod off. There are many online services where you can obtain audiobooks, but most of them are in MP3, which the iPod just treats as regular music. With a few steps, it is easy to convert MP3 files (or any other filetype that iTunes can play) into the native iPod audiobook format. There are a lot of different methods out there, but the following steps work nicely for me.

Before you begin

For best results, you should not upload audiobooks that are larger than 320MB or longer than 5 hours. This can cause playback and stability problems. If you have files larger than this, splitting them up into smaller parts is recommended.

Most audiobooks that you download will be in multiple files. I personally like combining these into a single file so I do not have to remember which file I am listening to. It also keeps the audiobooks menu on my iPod much easier to read. I simply let the iPod remember my position in the audiobook when I come back to it. It is just personal preference.

Most audiobooks will be far less than 320MB and 5 hours long, so if you want, you can combine your MP3s into a single file before you begin. MP3 Merger is a great freeware program.

Configuring iTunes

Before you convert the files, iTunes must be set properly. You should only have to do this once. In the iTunes menu (I am using version 6), select the following:

Edit > Preferences > Advanced > Importing

Make sure “Import Using” is set as “AAC Encoder“.

Change “Setting” to “Custom” and set the following options:

Bit Rate: 64kbs (this is a nice average setting for most audiobooks)
Channels: Stereo (fixes an issue with homemade mono files on some iPods)
Check “Optimize for Voice

Instructions

Add the files you want to convert to your library. Once they are there, select the file(s), right-click, and select “Convert Selection to AAC“. This will add the newly converted files to your library.

Once the conversion is complete, remove the original files from your library. They will no longer be needed for this process.

You can also remove the newly created files from your library, but when you are asked, be sure to select “Keep Files“, so they are not deleted off your hard drive.

The files are created under “My Documents\My Music\iTunes\iTunes Music(unless you told iTunes otherwise), so open up that folder.

You will notice that the new files have the .m4a extension. They must be renamed to .m4b.

Now that the files are renamed, you can add them to your iTunes library once again.

Right-click on the new file(s) in your library and select “Get Info“.

You can change the name of the file(s) on this screen. If you like, you can clear out the “artist” and “album” fields, so that they do not show up with the rest of your music on the iPod (when you are looking at albums or artists). They will still show up under “audiobooks” of course.

You can also change the genre of the files to “Audiobooks” using the iTunes tag editor, to make the files easier to find when looking through iTunes.

All you have to do now is add the files to your iPod. They should work just like any iTunes audiobook. They will show up under the “Audiobooks” menu on your iPod, your playback position will be remembered, and they will not get played during song shuffles.

Conclusion

I take no responsibility if you mess anything up, but as long as you follow these steps, it should work fine.

I have a fourth generation iPod. While this method works great for me, I cannot promise that it will work for all revisions.

  1. 157
    Dan

    I just worked this process on an audiobook I bought through emusic that had 174 pieces to it. The Merger utility worked great, combining everything into one long 12 hour mp3. Then the conversion to AAC took 2 hours, but now it’s finished and the process worked GREAT! Itunes 8.1

  2. 156
    RJS

    this works well, even in v8.1 of itunes … and to get 8.1 to recognize the file as an Audiobook, you have to use the “get info” go to the options tab and select media type as audiobook … and voila! all the way you’d like it.

  3. 155
    Erik Durfey

    Did the conversion and works fine in iTunes and on the iPod. That is the files are now protected AAC and bookmarking works. But they still don’t show up in the iPod Audiobooks menu. Thanks

  4. 154
    Rainer

    Why don’t you use the free MP3 to iPod Audio converter? It does it all automatically.

  5. 153
    Cilene

    please, how can I import the files to the Itunes library?

  6. 152
    surly

    You can also use this method with audio podcasts. Use the built in iTunes AAC converter to make .m4a files of your podcasts (generally mp3 format), locate the files in finder, then change the a to b and voila, your audiobook podcasts will file into your audiobook section. for some reason the MAX app can’t convert podcast files.

  7. I now love it even more… A few parts of my audio book skipped, repeated, and paused in some places. When i converted it, it fixed itself.

    I love technology.

  8. Wow, thanks so much!
    I downloaded a torrent and, unlike all my other audiobooks, this one was in a different section then my music (where my audiobooks are stored.) and I’ve *really* wanted to know how to do it.

    Thanks to the writer. There isn’t a flaw in this that I can see. I’m using a first-generation iPod and this seems to work perfectly!

  9. 149
    surly

    This post was the best method for converting files to the “recognizable audiobook” of the three techniques I tried. I downloaded a free program from apple called MAX which converted the mp3 files to apple lossless m4a files way way faster than using itunes to convert (trust me, I did mass file conversions to test each way). It also let me set up the file name format, which it gets the info from the file tag. Other than the tedious process of changing well over 1500 file extensions (in my case), this post was invaluable in starting my quest. Why the hell doesn’t Apple just have a “record in audiobook format” option on itunes? that would save everyone a lot of time and aggravation.

  10. If you ONLY want to save the position, then just:
    right click -> get info -> options -> tick “remember playback position”
    Or for multiple files,
    right click -> get info -> change “remember position” (bottom middle) to “yes”

    I convert to m4b so that I can play them back faster… only a little, but it helps.

  11. 147
    rachel

    worked for me with my existing mp3s.

    1. created apple lossless files
    2. made it so i could see file extensions
    3. changed from m4a to m4b opened in itunes

    viola! audiobook! thnx

  12. 146
    Arnav

    Awesome blog….did the same you said…..it worked perfectly…..with vista and itunes8…….

  13. This sounds like the best solution from Alicia, Was Audiobook Cutter 1 a share ware or was there a cost?

  14. 144
    Ylva

    Hi.. I did exactly what you said, but the files got a lot of background noise when I changed them to ACC.. And they still don’t show up as Audiobook on my iPod :(

  15. 143
    Julie

    I managed to do everything to convert the files into m4b and works fine on my ipod, but its not in the Audiobooks section on the ipod. What did I do wrong?

  16. 142
    Jude

    Awesome, thanks! It worked :)

  17. 141
    Alicia

    Much thank you to ‘Jon’ & much thank you to ‘wootwoot’ You both have helped me a lot.

    And I hope this can help people as well …

    First: I also got a horrible hissing sound, so as woot-woot and possibly others - Convert using Apple Lossless. It came out perfect for me!!!

    Second: To split MP3’s - In a previous post I mentioned a software. It’s called Audiobook Cutter 1. I got it from Download.com. It did the job and pretty quickly. My mp3 was 26 hours and the program split it into 20 parts = about 1h 20 mins per track. Now there is an option, instead of having the mp3 being split every 80 mins, you can choose less … Like: 5mins, 10mins, etc … the max is 80mins.

    Third: To rename the file this is what you need to do (VISTA USERS - “Control Panel Home”)

    Start > Control Panel > Appearance & Personalization > Folder Options > View = ‘Uncheck the box - “Hide extensions for unknown file types”‘

    Now go to Music > Itunes > (and whatever folder the files are in)
    Now just rename the “.M4a” - “.M4b” — A popup will appear saying (if you rename this file type it may not work) just click yes. The files will then be a m4b and it will become “Protected”

    After you’re done renaming put them in you’re intunes and you’re set!

    Also if you want, after you’re done go back and check “Hide extensions for unknown file types.”

    And one more thing. If you want the program I was talking about go to download.com and search for it “Audibook Cutter 1″ -OR- Click on the link I provided in my previous post.

    I hope this helps all those who were wondering …

    For people who do not have Vista the steps almost similar. The only thing that really differs is how you access the folder options, etc.

  18. 140
    Eric

    I have several MP3s I downloaded that are larger than the 320MB or longer than 5 hours limit you mentioned. How is the best way to split them?

  19. 139
    steph

    sorry, a m4a file into a m4b file

  20. 138
    steph

    how would you convert a m4b file into an m4a into an m4b file with windows vista using itunes 7? will this work?

  21. 137
    SV

    How do I rename file from .m4a to .m4b?

  22. 136
    noname

    or try “ren *.m4a *.m4b” via cmd

  23. 135
    Dan

    To convert any video file into another video file, I use Magic DVD ripper, and use it for all my ipod vids. It works wonderfully.

    On another note, its pretty dumb for this walkthrough to tell you everything about how to do it, except for the part where you actually do it. “They must be renamed…” No shit! sure am glad I read through this so you could tell me that!

    How about we just summarize this and say: Google “convert mp3 to audiobook” and download some software that says it can do it.

    I think that this might be better, and its only one sentence long. Plus that added bonus where it doesn’t waste all this time so you can say “these will need to be renamed…”

  24. 134
    GolfDude

    Can anyone help me to convert an MP4 Movie to play on my 30 gig Video Ipod?

  25. 133
    Ian

    There is an even easier option.. upload the mp3 in to your “music” section, then highlight tracks and hit CTRL-I. There you can select “Skip while shuffling” and “Remember position” - then create a playlist for the book.

    You can always come back to the position you left off and don’t have the hassle of getting Chapter 48 in the middle of a music mix..

  26. 132
    Karla

    I’m not sure why, this doesnt work for mine. The only problem I see is that the size is too big, but I don’t think that would be the problem. I really want to figure this out and get it working, so if anybody knows how to fix this, please let me know!

    karlarw8@yahoo.com

  27. 131
    wootwoot

    awesome!! i got crackling too but if that’s the case, use Apple Lossless instead of AAC. Perfect!! Thankyou so much, it was starting to get to me that my audiobooks werent in the ‘Audiobook’ section

  28. 130
    Lily

    This worked perfectly for me, thank you so much for these instructions.

  29. 129
    Pio

    I just tried the http://www.freeipodsoftware.com. Worked well.

    With the original instructions here I could not complete the manual tasks - some merges had 30 min instead of 4 hours or itune AAC conversion stopped in the middle with error -50. I was converting a language course. Thanks everyone or tips.

  30. 128
    Katie

    For those with background distortion - convert using Apple Lossless and then continue with the normal steps. Using AAC, I got fuzz, with lossless, it is perfectly clear :) Hope that helps

  31. 127
    Sean

    I am also getting background distortion (hissing, crackling sound) that definitely was not in the original mp3’s.

  32. 126
    Ares64

    I did everything you said & it worked fine…Thanx this was great…bbbuuuttt..I now hear the audiobooks with some backround distortion..is there anyway to clear this up?

  33. 125
    Michael

    Well, this was the cat’s meow. Perfect directions. And do yourself a favor and download this free renamer program. It’s called Renamer.exe, and you can get it from Majorgeeks.com

    Whoot!

  34. 124
    hilary

    OMG thanks so much! I converted it to mp4 and it worked. I never heard of pushing that convert to acc button. My dark shadows audiodramas used to play for 5 min, then skip back to beginning. It was horrible! Thanks again.

  35. 123
    rachel zhang

    I have problems with putting the text of the audiobook into the ipod.I usually put the lyrics into ipod by adding the lyrics to the file’s into, it worked with the songs,but why it doesn’t work with the .m4b audiobook. It showed in the itunes but it was just not in the ipod when I start to play the audiobook.How do I deal with that?

  36. You can just use the cat command in terminal

    Have all the files in one directory and then CD to that directory. Then simply type this in

    $cat * > xxx.mp3

    Where “xxx” would be whatever you wanted to call it.

    Obviously this required basic terminal skill.

  37. Use Audacity to combine the mp3s then follow instructions

  38. 120
    Tom Smith

    This worked great for me, thank you.

    If you use Automator, renaming the files, deleting the old .m4a’s and importing the .m4b’s into iTunes is much quicker.

  39. 119
    Ali

    Actually, this worked fine for me. I was able to convert one mp3 file into ipod format. Thank you for your clear instructions. Now, I am still finding it difficult to get a number of mp3 files converted into ipod format at once, in the form of an audiobook, but given some more trying, it should be no problem. Appreciate the help.

  40. 118
    chris

    I am having problems merging all my MP3 files - have tried two shareware programs, but they will not let me add my files to the program. Any ideas what I can do?

  41. 117
    dacuan

    Rename file Extension… Go To - Tools , Folder Options , View tab , Uncheck the hide extensions for known file types.

    Then just “Rename” the extension.

  42. 116
    jon

    Tom: To rename the file extension in Windows,not sure how to do it in osx =/, you must first make sure that you do the following:
    go to my computer—>Tools—>Folder Options—>View—> Make sure that the “Hide Extensions for known file types” is not checked. Then
    Locate your original m4a file and right click on it and press Rename. After the “.” change the “m4a” to “m4b”
    this is how you rename a file extension.
    Hope this helps! =)

  43. 115
    stacey

    I have converted the files but cannot find an option to save audiobooks on my ipod. i have the latest version of itunes.
    can you help me?

  44. 114
    Tom

    I got over the first problem,
    was stupid enough not to press the SORT FILES button.
    Now what about renaming the extension?

  45. 113
    Tom

    Thanks for the guide.
    My first problem was trying to combine all the mp3 files. It messed up the order even though the files were ordered. I couldnt over come this problem, the second problem was when I tried to rename the file, it always had the same original .m4a

  46. 112
    Johno

    hey. i did everything to achieve merging into one file and conversion to .m4b and now it shows up as an audiobook in itunes, but on my ipod (ipod classic) it still shows up as music.

  47. 111
    Kevin

    Works fantastically with my new Ipod Nano 3rd Gen…you get a gold star for this info..

  48. I did need to convert mps files into audiobooks.
    So I searched and searched through Internet,
    and finally I got it!!
    It works well!! I have a ipod nano 3rd.
    Thanks man, now, I can listen to my audiobooks
    not as music, but as a book.
    It doesn’t seem like be important.
    But not for me. Thanks again ;)

  49. 109
    Tammy

    Could someone please tell me how to rename a file extension in Vista - I can’t seem to find where to do this.

  50. 108
    Habib

    Thanx buddy this also works with my iPod Nano…= )

  51. 107
    Mos

    These directions work great for the Ipod Nano (8GB) as well. I didn’t change the setting to custom though. I left it as High Quality (128 kbps). I suspect this is why it took a little longer to convert. Thanks for the tip…

  52. 106
    krycek

    how can i paste every track of the same audiobook into one big one?… i manage to have many but i dont want to, i mean its just one book after all… isnt it?…

    well thanxs in advanced

  53. I forgot to mention that this program works well with Vista. Simply open the program, drag the folder containing the m4a files onto the program window, type m4b in the change to box and that’s it. A word of caution- make sure only m4a files that you want changed are included in your folder as ALL files within the folder will get tne new file extension.

  54. For any who don’t want to take the step to merge your mp3 files or who have many audiobooks with many file extensions to change from m4a to m4b a very useful tool called Extension Changer. It can be found by visiting http://www.download.com.

    A direct link: http://www.download.com/Extension-Changer/3000-2347_4-10409905.html?tag=lst-1

  55. 103
    lt. Jon McClane

    i used this for my audiobook “I am legend” and it worked perfectly fine with my iphone Thanks your a life Saver!!!!!11

  56. 102
    krycek

    im working under vista aswell… and i cant find as joyce any chance to get the extentions changed… how do i do that,…:???

  57. 101
    joyce

    How do I change the file extension. I am working in Vista and cannot find a way to change the file extension.

  58. 100
    Siri

    It works perfectly on mac to! thank you! but it takes more place.

  59. 99
    Jerrica

    It worked for my iPod Nano Video (3rdG) thanks!

  60. 98
    Darren

    I am trying to convert an Audio book, and I have merged all the files together, (about 14M), and itunes is saying it will take 84:47:30! Does it take anyone else that long????

  61. 97
    oscar

    About the crackly problem, select “Spoken Podcast” instead of the 64kbs recommended. It worked for me.

  62. 96
    Decco

    Sorry,
    It turned out that the sound quality of the Audiobook became crackly when I first converted it to .m4a even before I converted it to .m4b. Does anyone think I may be able to overcome this….even by using another converter instead of iTunes? And yes the sound quality was great when it was an mp3, i checked! :)

    Thanks

  63. 95
    Decco

    Hi,
    It all worked fine, great thanks! Only one problem. After I changed the file extension to .m4b the quality of the audio became very crackly. But it did pop up in the Audibooks section of my iTunes Library, so that works well.
    Just wondering if anybody knew what I could do about the quality, seeing as nobody else has commented about that.

    Thanks.

  64. 94
    Liam

    awesome, worked with no hassle. thx a lot.

  65. 93
    willi

    yeah, this worked perfectly for the new 80 gig ipod video. thanks you so much.

  66. 92
    mdej

    Your directions worked perfect for me and my IPod Nano video (3rd generation)

  67. 91
    Tom

    Guys, you can get a program for Mac called Audiobook Builder, it does everything for you :)

  68. when I rip audiobooks from CDs that I purchase it seems that sometimes they show up in the Audiobooks section, and sometimes under music. I would like to designate them Audiobooks, but can’t find it anywhere in the properties to make this change. Anyway to take an audiobook that shows up in Music and move/change it to an Audiobook in Itunes?

  69. 89
    Damelza

    I used automator to rename the files from .m4a to .m4b - that was fantastically easy!

  70. 88
    Sherry

    Thanks for the info! This worked great for me. I changed over the file easily. However, it still showed up in the songs palylist and in the shuffle on the ipod. Solved this esily too…In itunes, right-click on your new audio book file and go to the options tab…You will see an option to not have this file included in the shuffle. Easy, Easy! The file does show up under AudioBooks on the ipod too.

  71. 87
    Brad N

    Hi,

    I just tried the http://www.freeipodsoftware.com. It worked beautifully and easily, except I think it decreases the quality and file size a tiny bit. It takes all the steps away, but does take away from the level of control you have with the Admin’s manual method.

    Brad

  72. 86
    Jenna

    Hi there! I’ve tried following the steps previously mentioned to convert mp3 format audiobooks to the m4a (then m4b) format, and so far I have been able to do that. The problem is, it doesn’t seem to convert the whole file. Only about a minute’s worth of the file is converted. Can anybody help? I’m really new at all this iPod stuff. Thanks!

  73. Hi!

    http://www.freeipodsoftware.com provides a simple and free software for exact that task: it allows you to combine multible mp3 files and convert them to ipod *.m4b format.

    Regards,
    Flo

  74. 84
    Jake

    Thank you sooo much!!! i can finally listen to it!

  75. 83
    Lyle

    I have several LONG works to bring in (100 =/- subfiles) that run up to 18 hours. I’ve imported them using the AAC etc setting recommended, however it triplicates the files (100 becomes 300) with 3 copies of earh. Do I just manually delete the two extra copies or would I be better off to finds a utility (recommendations?) to merge it into one mega file?
    Also how can you get Ipod to place them in a folder to run the conversion script?

  76. Jake: You may have Windows set to hide file extensions, which makes it a bit tricker. Here are instructions on showing them:

    http://www.tacktech.com/display.cfm?ttid=193

  77. 81
    Jake

    I got to the ACC file converting, but after i delete them i don’t know how to change the file from a m4a to a m4b please tell me how to get this to work!!! I’ve been working on it for three days now and it’s driving me insane!

  78. 80
    Tracy

    Thanks SO MUCH for the quick replies guys!
    Actually - Problem solved - I’m a noob!
    I figured out soon after posting that the audiobooks (m4b files) are also accessible through the regular songs folder, which then gives me artist/album access options, so they’re not all jumbled together anymore. And they’re even still kept separate from my “music” in the shuffle and game!
    It wasn’t REALLY a problem after all. Sorry for the uselessly long post!! Thanks again!!

  79. Eugene: Renaming the files so they are sorted the way you would like them is a very good tip - I should have thought to mention that ;)

  80. 78
    Eugene

    Tracy:

    I also go to sleep listening to audiobooks. The Clock->Sleep Timer feature is my friend. The bookmark is meaningful….just from 5-25 minutes after I’ve fallen asleep. Still easily zippable to with the lovely jog shuttle.

    Alternatively or in combination, the iPod sorts by name, so you could rename your files in iTunes. - I did this with a series of books I had that I wanted to be in series order in the list, rather than alphabetical (prefixed with ‘1: ‘ ‘2: ‘ and so on.) You seem to have a lot of files to edit, which is easy with any of a number of scripting languages, but if you’re not comfortable with that I’d combine the files using a joiner utility.

    regards.

  81. Tracy: Unless they have updated something lately, I do not think there are any other methods to organize audiobooks on an iPod.

    I have not ever purchased audiobooks from iTunes, so I am not sure about that one.

    For the files to be a problem, they have to be very big. A few users have reported success with various sizes (check out the comments below). A lot of books will fit in one or two files though. It mainly depends on the bitrate, etc..

    I would probably suggest combining the files together. I know there are lots of free utilities to do this, but the names of any escape me right now.

  82. 76
    Tracy

    I just bought a brand new 80gb iPod today and this method worked GREAT for getting the mp3 audiobooks I already had into the audiobook folder.
    HOWEVER
    My audiobooks are split into hundreds of small files - something that was necessary for my old MP3-CD player (which could not fast forward in MP3 files…)
    AND I KNOW
    That this method is designed almost specifically to get the ‘bookmarking’ feature - and most people would tell me to just join the mp3’s to one or several large files before converting to m4a.
    BUT
    I like to go to sleep listening to the books, and I like to have them continue playing for some time after I fall asleep - so a bookmark is pretty useless for me - it would always be innacurate.
    AND Fast-Forwarding seems so slow and time-consuming as to not even be considered as an option…
    MY PROBLEM IS
    The audiobook folder seems to have no intentions of organizing my audiobooks - it does not organize by artist or album - just dumps my thousands of files pell-mell amongst eachother. Where many books have the same disc-track title naming scheme it is impossible to tell the books from one another.
    AND
    If I keep them as MP3 and leave them in my songs folder - I am afraid my shuffle will include the book files - and also that fun little ‘music quiz’ game that I have fallen in love with.
    SO MY QUESTIONS ARE
    Is it POSSIBLE to get the iPod to organize the Audiobooks folder by artist and album?
    Do Audiobooks bought from the iTunes music store come in one big file?
    Isn’t it sort of backwards to require big files when, as you report, large files screw up the system?

    –Long-winded I know, but I desperately want this to work.
    Thanks in advance.

  83. 75
    Logan

    I recommend using a seperate conversion program instead of converting it with iTunes. I use dBpoweramp (http://www.dbpoweramp.com/) and downloaded the appropriate codec with it. It will convert the files a lot faster that way…

    Thanks for the walkthrough.

  84. 74
    Andre

    thanks a lot, great idea as a lot of audiobooks are mp3 format, however its going to take 3 or so hours. well worth the wait though!

  85. 73
    Lisa

    Absolutely brilliant!!!!! It worked first time, I have a 2nd generation Nano so it works for those too!

  86. 72
    Guy

    Thanks A Million, it helped me a lot.
    About the size limits- I used it for Adams’ HHGG books, which are a longer than 5 hours, and it worked OK.

  87. 71
    L mooiweer

    Cheers for posting this, really helps!

  88. 70
    Dan

    Thanks! Great idea! Also, just a note: you are right on about files over 300 mb - I'm converting an audio book now and it has 26 hours left (and I'm running on a dual core 2.4 Ghz with 2GB of RAM!).

  89. [...] Turning MP3 Audiobooks Into iPod Audiobooks [...]

  90. 68
    Jamie

    Absolutely brilliant - first time around I zipped through and couldn’t figure out why it wasn’t working; went through a second time, followed the instructions to the letter, and now everything’s working perfectly. Thank you so much!

  91. [...] iTunes. In doing so, however, I lose the resume playback capability. Using Dagon Design’s excellent tutorial, I’m able to turn them back into audiobooks in a flash. The best feature of the iPod’s [...]

  92. 66
    Marc Freemantle

    Thanks a lot it worked…

  93. I just want to say that this is pure genius, I had been trying to work this out for months!!!!!!!!!!! this is fantastic!!!

  94. Oh, and does anyone know a freeware or open source prog to merge files already in .m4a?

  95. Quick note: for Windows one can create a .bat file containing:

    “RENAME *.m4a *.m4b”

    (without the quotation marks, obviously) and run it in the folder with the files to be renamed.

  96. Aaron: I have not ever used a Mac, so I am not sure if the instructions would need to be changed.

  97. 61
    Aaron

    Admin, I actually did change the file extension( to M4B (on a Mac), and I opened the AAC file as a text file (using Word), and in the header, it still shows it as M4A. One of the comments below said that you also had to change the internal file tag??? Thanks!

  98. Aaron: You just have to change the file extension.

  99. 59
    Aaron

    I may have missed this, but how do you change the iinternal file tag to M4B?

  100. 58
    Kit

    I also tried this is it worked for 4 out of 5 files. The fifth file appeared to convert except when I listened to it the book was only 1 hour long and the audiobook should be over 8 hours long. Anyone know why would this only happen to one file?

  101. Thank you so much. I’ve recently taken to collecting the Harry Potter audiobooks (if you haven’t heard them, they’re fantasically performed), but wanted the ability to change the speed of the audio to the iPod’s “faster” setting. This worked perfectly.

  102. Worked like a charm thanks for putting this together.

  103. 55
    nate

    CHRIS: Thanks! Filenamer worked great!

  104. 54
    Fabs

    hi. i converted an mp3 audiobook already the first time, and it worked. the moment i changed the file to m4b, it automatically transferred into the audiobooks folder in my iTunes. however, on changing another audiobook, after changing it to m4b, it didn’t transfer. the file remained in my music library. so i deleted it and redid everything. i tried converting the mp3 file over and over again and even checked my preferences many times, but still it remained in the music library. but it’s m4b. why does this happen?

  105. 53
    George

    if you cant change from m4a to m4b read this; http://support.microsoft.com/kb/307859/en-us

  106. Great work, I had software that does this but it doesn’t work so well in Vista. This works great. Thank you. Also to Chris, thanks for the file renamer link, it works well also!

  107. 51
    Tom

    This process definitely converted my mp3’s to m4b’s and my 80GB 5th G iPod recognizes them as audiobooks. However…

    One of my mp3’s had a duration of over 2 hours. After I converted it to AAC using itunes, it said the duration was only 45 min. I tried listening to it on the iPod and the audio cut out after about 14 min and the rest was dead air. Anything like that happen to anyon else?

  108. 50
    Dave

    thanks a lot!

  109. Dave: Thanks for the info :)

  110. Getting MP3 files to behave as audio books (ie, become “bookmarkable”) in iTunes for Macintosh requires an additional step.

    Not only must the file extension be m4b (which you can change manually from m4a) but the file type (an internal file tag) must be also be changed to “M4B” (note use of capitals). The combination of these 2 changes, and voila! You’ve got books on ‘Pod!

    This is a great AppleScript by Doug Adams that runs in iTunes that does the file TYPE change and re-imports the files so that they appear in the Audiobooks folder of iTUnes:

    You can do the same thing by checking the “Remember Playback Position” box for each file, but MB script saves you a lot of time if you’re working with many files.

    Enjoy,
    Dave

  111. 47
    Varun Soundararajan

    Great work, was very useful and it works well.

  112. 46
    vivek

    thanks a lot dude… it works fine…

  113. steve: Good to hear :)

  114. 44
    steve

    Admin Thank you,
    I have a 4th Generation Ipod and Itunes 7.0.2 on a Imac G4. I had a hard time finding someone (Including Apple Store People) that understood this concept until I found your site, again thank you! This didn’t completely work until I downloaded Doug Adams Script that JD suggested. I had a little trouble with getting the script to work, but then follow Doug’s instructions as to where to put the script. Selected the files, clicked the Script Icon and “wha-la” the files converted and moved to Audiobooks!

  115. 43
    kasia_be

    oh, sorry for bothering, I’ve just found out - if anyone is interested - selecting “music video” i Options tab in “Get info” for the file should work :)