Import your file(s) or folders, select an output format, customize it as you wish, select a place to put the results, & click the convert button to start the process.
#Mediavatar video to audio converter pro
Using mediAvatar Audio Converter Pro is easy, as long as you avoid following the directions displayed in the center of the re-sizable program window. Note especially that if you want to convert the audio on many DVDs &/or digital broadcast recordings you'll often run into multi-channel AC3, or with Blu-Ray, DTS - with multi-channel if you're after any sort of original quality IMHO don't use ffmpeg, but try to limit your use of video apps to extracting the audio stream as-is, from that point on using audio software.
I don't think that last part is something critical to most folks, but if/when you're into audio quality it can matter - if you use higher quality speakers, headphones, or ear-buds you can probably tell the difference. In general using video-oriented code like ffmpeg does work for audio, & if you use a video-based app you can often extract audio tracks from video files/formats - OTOH the app is bigger because of that video-based code, & IMHO it doesn't do the audio end of things as well as software designed for audio from the start. There was a video convertor on GOTD on the 19th that I wasn't thrilled with - take away the video profiles/formats & in a nutshell you've got mediAvatar Audio Converter Pro.