: Hi, : Yes, I have a solution, but it isn't the easiest thing in the world to do. There are two different CD burning plugins provided by Audible, but the only one I can use is by Roxio. What it does is create track 1.wav, track 2.wav, etc. for each section of the .aa file it's converting. It stores these files in your : %temp% directory, in my case it's C:\temp, but yours may be different. you can put a CD-RW in the drive and then press "burn", but when you do, limit the time to one hour. If you use 1 hr 12 min, for example, the application hangs. Ok, then while it's creating the track files and burning them on the CD you can copy (not move) them to a different dirctory. You'll need to rename the files to keep from conflict, but that's pretty obvious. Then, after you have all the files captured, you can use something like Goldwave to convert the .wav files to .mp3, saving about 90% of the size. After you have the .mp3 files you can burn them onto a CD with Nero Burning ROM or some other convenient program. It's a lot harder than it used to be when Goldwave worked at opening the .aa files, but now that it doesn't it's the best way I can think of. Anybody got a better idea?
---- Yeah, why not just let it burn it to a CD-RW and then rip it to mp3s directly from there? A much less complicated way.