iTunes Converter is an audio file converter for the Mac. It can be used to convert your audio files between different formats, but the developer's description makes it sound as if the main feature of the app is to help you remove copy protection (DRM) from your files. If I understood correctly, iTunes Converter uses a digital recording system that plays copy-protected files and records them digitally to keep their quality and remove any copy protections.
iTunes Converter's graphical interface is rather simple. It consists of a single window, where you can add files to a conversion queue by clicking on the "Add" button. When you click on that button, a window will pop-up with the songs on your iTunes playlists. You can click on songs to add them. After that is done, the only option available is to click on the "Convert" button, which starts the recording process. You are not asked what format you would like to use as output during this process. You can change the formats in the preferences window. There I found that you can set different formats for spoken audio and songs, which makes sense if you want to remove the copy protection from your audiobooks to play them on any device.
I didn't have any copy-protected song, so I tested this app with a regular MP3 file. The quality of the recorded song was OK, but I am no audiophile.
With Controller Editor, you can precisely define which MIDI message has to be sent upon any action you do on your Native Instruments controller.
It removes DRM protection of any movie you purchased from the iTunes store.
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