There's no progress indicator, so be patient and separately use Windows File Explorer to open the output directory and open a *.* search to watch as files add up -s-l-o-w-l-y. The reason it depends on Apple iTunes is at least to remove DRM from Apple media, including audiobooks, which it offers to arbitrarily divide into smaller files as unintelligently divided sub-chapters ( some original audiobooks are one file for hours of reading, hardly manageable ). It would be nice if the tweak to change speed would be configurable for a user-selected beats-per-minute target, and a promise that it will not change pitch would be nice, though a separate pitch control with a user-selected target pitch and or key would also be nice ( did anybody else find the pitch control ? ). It would be nice if it would save the converted files in the same location as the originals instead of creating a whole new separate output structure, which would save the need for a great deal of subsequent re-structuring for my directories or trying to find another program that might automatically put the converted files back where they belong.
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