|
Convert M4V to FLAC
|
Total Audio MP3 Converter converts M4V to FLAC
easily and quickly. The software supports more than 90 audio and video formats
as input, and converts to popular audio formats such as AAC, AIFF, M4A, M4B, MP3,
OGG, WAV, WMA, and so on.
Total Audio MP3 Converter supports batch conversion,
and is full compatible with Vista and Windows 7 (both 32-bit and 64-bit editions).
- Free Download Total Audio MP3 Converter
- Install the Software by Step-by-step Instructions
- Launch Total Audio MP3 Converter
- Choose M4V Files
Click "Add Files" button to choose M4V files and add
them to conversion list.
Choose one or more M4V files you want to convert and then click Open.
Total Audio MP3 Converter will open the files, and then read file information such as
duration, bit rate, sample, and channels, and show them on the program.
- Choose Target File Format
Choose "to FLAC"
- Convert M4V to FLAC
Click "Convert" to convert M4V files to FLAC.
The software is converting M4V files to FLAC.
- Play & Browse
Right-click converted item and choose "Play Destination" to play
the destination file, choose "Browse Destination Folder" to open
Windows Explorer to browse the destination file.
- Done
Top
What is M4V?
M4V is a standard file format for the popular Apple iPod devices. There are two
definitions for the term M4V. The first is that raw MPEG-4 Visual bitstreams are
named .m4v. The second, and much more likely, is that you have legally downloaded
a video file from the Apple iTunes store and it has the M4V extension. These files
can be movies, TV shows or music videos and all will include Apple's FairPlay
DRM copyright protection.
What is FLAC?
Free Lossless Audio Codec (FLAC) is a file format for lossless audio data compression.
Being lossless, FLAC does not remove information from the audio stream, as lossy
compression formats such as MP3, AAC, and Vorbis do. FLAC's primary author is
Josh Coalson. FLAC reduces bandwidth and storage requirements without sacrificing
the integrity of the audio source. A digital audio recording (such as a CD track)
encoded to FLAC can be decompressed into an identical copy of the audio data.
Audio sources encoded to FLAC are typically reduced in size 40 to 50 percent (46%
according to their own comparison). FLAC is suitable for everyday audio playback
and archival, with support for tagging, cover art and fast seeking. FLAC's free
and open source royalty-free nature makes it well-supported by many software applications,
but FLAC playback support in portable audio devices and dedicated audio systems
is limited at this time.
Convert M4V to FLAC Related Topics:
|