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mov Audio Extractor 5.0.2 Giveaway
$29.95
EXPIRED

Giveaway of the day — mov Audio Extractor 5.0.2

Powerful, easy to use video to audio extractor software!
$29.95 EXPIRED
User rating: 434 21 comments

mov Audio Extractor 5.0.2 was available as a giveaway on February 2, 2014!

Today Giveaway of the Day
$25.95
free today
Encrypt your PDF documents.

Powerful, easy to use video to audio extractor software converts among all popular video and audio formats with fast conversion speed. The mov Audio Extractor interface is very simple and user-friendly. To extract audio tracks from video files, just drag and drop them into main window, select proper profile from list, and click the convert button.

If the audio quality is poor, increase audio bitrate.

Extracts audio tracks from video files without loss of sound quality or convert them to MP3, AAC, AC3, WMA, FLAC, OGG or WAV format. The application supports all major video formats (AVI, FLV, MP4, MPG, MOV, RM, 3GP, WMV, VOB and other).

System Requirements:

Windows 8, 7, Vista, 2003, XP, 2000; CPU (minimum): Intel Pentium 4 (2GHz) or AMD AthlonTM XP 2800+ (2.2GHz); RAM: 512MB; recommended: Intel 2 Duo E6300 (1.86GHz) or AMD AthlonTM 64 X2 3800+ (2GHz); RAM: 1GB

Publisher:

CoolMedia

Homepage:

http://coolrecordedit.com/movaudioextractor.html

File Size:

13.7 MB

Price:

$29.95

GIVEAWAY download basket

Developed by MPCSTAR
Developed by VSO Software
View the feedback from multiple IP cameras.
Edit multiple video files to create custom presentations.

Comments on mov Audio Extractor 5.0.2

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#21

Just a point to note regarding this developer. They tend to bundle their software with a lot of hard-to-remove bloat-ware.Best examples,the All Free DVD Ripper and All Free Disc Burner come loaded with "Relevant Knowledge" which behaves like a worm hogging internet resources. Please avoid them for your own good.

Reply   |   Comment by KenyanPhoenix  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+5)
#20

@18
Yes there is a way to extract video from audio files. What you do is take the audio file, then make a video file by shooting one with your camera, and then add the video you have take to the audio file. Then you can extract the video.

Reply   |   Comment by frank  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+3)
#19

@2
You proclaim (is that ex cathedra?) that the Pazera is not just better, but "FAR BETTER," than this...but you don't know why or how. Seems most unfair to the developer that you would make such a blanket statement putting him down. I personally found this program to be very good indeed.

Reply   |   Comment by frank  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+4)
#18

Question: does anyone know of a program to extract video from audio files? That would be very handy.

Reply   |   Comment by Joe  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-8)
#17

Works great. But the previous giveaways do the job better. Aneesoft Video Converter Pro and HD Video Converter Factory Pro have functions to convert the video into various mp3 format. Will skip this download.

Reply   |   Comment by Dave  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#16

I do not know if this post will be accepted by the mods, because some other posts, like the one that I attempted to place a few days ago in support of Ashraf , asking him to continue to contribute to this site, are being rejected by the moderator.

Having this put out of the way, and hoping again that this post will be approved, I would like to point out that when I pressed All Free Video Converter button, my chrome browser stopped me in my tracks instantly, alarming me that the site is dangerous.
So be careful, Folks.

Giovanni, welcome back.
I have grown to like your contributions very much, especially after having realized the tremendous effort you put into finding some real gems in freeware.
Keep up the good work.

Cheers,

im

Reply   |   Comment by im  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+10)
#15

#2's link also downloads conduit search bar, sweet packs and goodness know whatever else I cancelled it and will give GAOTD prog a try

Reply   |   Comment by Herriot  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+5)
#14

Good freeware alternative: Pazera Audio Extractor

Reply   |   Comment by Neil from Ohio  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-8)
#13

The Pazera software additional information section is the same word for word as the description for the giveaway program. Are you sure they aren't the same program or has Shia LeBouf started a software company?

Reply   |   Comment by Joe Smart  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+2)
#12

@Giovanni, I tried to download pazera audio extractor and chrome blocked the download as malicious. Thanks but no thanks. I'll try this free GAOTD

Reply   |   Comment by magiccrpet  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+5)
#11

"If the audio quality is poor, increase audio bitrate."

How will increasing the audio bitrate improve poor audio quality?

Reply   |   Comment by Bill  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+5)
#10

Curious to know: (1) How long is the license good for, and (2) If on would have to do a complete clean install of their OS, would you still be able to reinstall and use it without any problems? Thank You.

Reply   |   Comment by Ron Lewis  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (-3)
#9

NOT saying there's anything wrong with mov Audio Extractor, there are lots of alternatives. Videohelp.com lists 49 tools in its muxer - demuxer category -- muxer = multiplexer, which mean combining the audio & video, & as you'd guess, demuxers do the reverse. Many [most?] video conversion apps can at least demux, as can simple ffmpeg front ends like the free WinFF. For demuxers [audio extractors] it often boils down to if you like the GUI -- mov Audio Extractor is certainly prettier than WinFF.
http://www.videohelp.com/tools/sections/video-de-multiplexers

Audio conversion is a different animal however, although any differences may only be important if you lean more towards being an audiophile. My biggest quarrel with many conversion tools is that they often add processing without giving you a choice in the matter, e.g. normalization & sometimes compression. Normalization is basically a more complicated way of raising the volume level, but too often IMHO it's set to the highest level possible, with no way to adjust that. If you're just extracting the audio from a music video that's fine -- if you intend to mux [combine] the results with video again that's too loud. Software like Soundforge can also use a more complicated method of normalization that can sound better, if that matters to you.

Audio compression reduces the difference in volume between the loudest & quietest portions of an audio file or track -- expansion does the reverse. If there's a big difference -- a large dynamic range -- it sounds better, but, only at high enough volume levels so you can hear the more quiet stuff. Problem is that often you can't raise the volume levels high enough, either because of where you're listening or because your speakers, headphones, or earbuds aren't up to the task. An awful lot of players, software & hardware, offer different levels of compression on-the-fly, so you can keep the full dynamic range in the audio file, adjusting compression in the player to suit you -- that gives you the flexibility to listen to the audio as intended when you can, or keep the neighbors from calling the cops -- lets you watch the same movie on your tablet or using your home theater setup.

There's another potential problem if/when you convert the audio's sample rate... in a nutshell 48/44.1 = 1.08843537414966. If you zoom in to look at an audio file's waveform, the points where there's actual data don't match up when you compare a file at 48000 Hz with one at 44100 Hz. Usually you can avoid extra quality loss simply by avoiding any sample rate conversion when possible, or halve it when it's not. When you can't, say when you want to take an audio track from a video, which more often is sampled at 48, & put it on an audio CD, where the spec calls for 44.1, using software that can use something called dithering helps. That capability isn't rare, but you do have to look for it.

Finally, the last thing to be aware of when you're working with audio & video is that they use completely different clocks. Hopefully you won't have any problems, but it can help to just be aware of potential issues in case you do. If you take out [demux] the audio that's combined with a video file, & compare it to a pure audio recording, very often they will not match. One way they deal with that is by using the AC3 format with audio packets [think capsules] that may contain a surprising amount of empty space -- like a glass with only a little water in it -- the point being that at the start of each packet the audio's in sync. That sort of thing can sometimes cause timing changes converting &/or trimming, maybe more so with video formats like AVC/H.264, that may not have much timing info to begin with, & is made worse when many apps won't handle what timing info there is correctly.

Reply   |   Comment by mike  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+37)
#8

VLC can do this, as well as serve as a replacement for Media Player. No doubt one of the best AV players out there, and it's free too!


http://www.videolan.org/vlc/index.html

Reply   |   Comment by pixelriffic  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+7)
#7

Free AviDemux can extract audio and cut videos and ...
http://avidemux.sourceforge.net/

Reply   |   Comment by FrancisBorne  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+2)
#6

If all you need is extraction to mp3 audio, you can try this online free service

http://www.fullrip.net/

Allows you to choose bitrate. Fast but not furious. Nothing to dl, nothing to install.

It is superb. Works every time.

Reply   |   Comment by Live Clive  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (0)
#5

We can extract the audios free. We can do it online. Check this site. http://audio-extractor.net/ . It supports various video formats such as AVI, FLV, MP4, MPG, MOV, RM, 3GP, WMV, VOB and other. You can extract audio in OGG, MP3, Wave or FLAC formats.

If you want a software here it is : Pazera Free Audio Extractor. Pazera Free Audio Extractor enables you to extract (or convert) audio tracks from video files and automatically convert them to MP3, AAC, AC3, WMA, FLAC or WAV format. It supports all popular video formats including AVI, FLV, MP4, MPG, MOV, RM, 3GP, WMV, VOB and others. In addition to audio extraction the program can also be used to convert existing audio files to any of the supported formats.

Reply   |   Comment by krm  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+2)
#4

Thanks to GOTD + CoolMedia.
Easily installed + activated.
Tried it.

Result: Good. Easy to use.
It can also convert video to:
AVI MP4 FLV SWF MPEG RM WMV MOV 3GP

It can convert output to play on these devices:
iPod iPhone AppleTV PSP BlackBerry MobilePhone iPad Android

It can extract Audio to:
WAV MP3 WMA OGG AAC M4A FLAC MP2




----------

Tried downloading the recommended alternative Pazera Free Audio Extractor in the given link.

However, during download Google Chrome popped this warning.
"Pazera_Free_Audio_Extractor 2-0.exe is malicious, and Chrome has blocked it."

Reply   |   Comment by ric  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+17)
#3

I use the service online:
http://www.youtube-mp3.org
It is free, it is fast, it works well, it doesn’t require an installation, it is multilingual, but I keep an open mind and, like when YouTube to MP3 Downloader was offered here last October (I was not convinced) I am waiting for an argument that would make me think it would be worth to give this new giveaway a try.

Reply   |   Comment by ouialaraison  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+6)
#2

http://www.pazera-software.com/products/audio-extractor

==> FREE and FAR BETTER than this GAOTD <== ^_^ Enjoy!!

Please focus on different kind of apps!

Reply   |   Comment by Giovanni (directly from HELL....I died a few  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+166)
#1

Install and reg went fine on windows 8.1 64bit. does what it says, does it decent and quick. most but not all formats supported. Does nothing that the free FormatFactory doesn't do.
thums up for how it works but really... isn't this field oversaturated?

Reply   |   Comment by NoName  –  10 years ago  –  Did you find this comment useful? yes | no (+55)
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