



A window pops up and… it starts to convert!ĭoesn’t take long for the task to finish. The default settings work great (you can see them all at the bottom) so I’m going to click and check the box adjacent to each track I want to convert then click on the Convert button on the top left. Notice it scans and finds every track in my Windows iTunes library: To do that, I’m going to just launch TuneFab Apple Music Converter. That means that it won’t work on anything other than an Apple-DRM enabled program. The key is in the first line: Kind: Purchased AAC audio file. Occupational hazard when you’re a film critic! Choose an album, choose a track, then check out the Properties window by right-clicking on it and you’ll see that purchased music is not in mp3 format: Yeah, I listen to a lot of movie soundtracks. Let’s start in iTunes for Windows, on a Windows 10 system: To demonstrate the purchased music conversion, let me show you how I converted some of my recent iTunes purchases into Mp3 format to make them more portable…

Not only that, but TuneFab Apple Music Converter can also convert music from Apple Music into Mp3 files you can save and listen to later too. No loss of functionality, just a gain in portability. Better yet: convert your music or audio books and you’ll find that Windows Media Player, iTunes, and even Web browsers can easily play mp3 files. The third party program TuneFab Apple Music Converter offers a solution, fortunately, and it can easily tackle files in M4B, AA, AAX and M4P formats, converting them to the far more portable and universal Mp3 or “.mp3” format. Not only that, there are quite a few formats that can produce this sort of problem on your computer, and it’s not just limited to the Mac platform either. Apple is particularly aggressive about this and if you want to switch from an iPhone to an Android phone and keep your purchased music and audio, you’ll quickly find that the files aren’t portable. You aren’t “buying” the latest Bruno Mars CD or John Grisham audiobook, you’re basically renting the rights to listen to it as long as you stay in the same ecosystem and never stray. The fundamental problem with Digital Rights Management is that it changes the meaning of purchasing something without most people realizing what’s happened.
