mp3Tag
MP3 Editor de etiquetas y organizador de música
AudioConverter Studio
Convertidor de formatos de sonido y extractor de CD audio
MIDI Converter Studio
Conversión de archivos MIDI en WAV, MP3, OGG, WMA
Visual MP3 Splitter & Joiner
Divisor rápido de MP3 y WAV sin recompresión, unificador de WAV y MP3
MP3 Recorder Studio
¡Grabador de audio sencillo y asequible!
Media Catalog Studio
Organizador de archivos multimedia y administrador de colecciones
iPod Video Converter
Este convertidor es el mejor amigo de tu iPod

Llegue a saber lo que nuestros usuarios piensan de nuestro software:

"I've been using your great tools to convert CD audio books into MP3 files so my dyslexic son can listen to them on an MP3 player with no moving parts. The tag editor and splitter/joiner make it easy to handle the often chaotic file naming and tagging of ausio book tracks, and the converter was very useful in changing WMA format files into MP3s for joining and tagging.

I also use the MIDI converter software to create audio CDs for choir members to learn ther parts. Some of them don't have computers and e-mail to use MIDI files, so with the converter I can give them a CD to play on standard audio equipment."
Earl Hughes
"I haven't had time to look at the three programs more thoroughly, but so far they seem to have some exellent functions. Really nice, indeed. There are lots of MP3-tag apps, but this ones seems to glimmer... Will definatly be a recommender to friends..."
Christer Andersen

MP3 to get digital rights management

In the background of the growing popularity of online music stores such as iTunes Music Store and Napster looms a format war between AAC and WMA. Is there room for a third challenger? The most popular digital music format, MP3, is universally recognized by digital music players and accounts for the vast majority of music available on Kazaa and other P2P networks. Thomson, the company responsible for licensing the mp3 format, will begin offering a DRMed version of the codec. The DRMed version will use standard MP3 compression tech along with DRM which will be in-line with emerging standards. Current digital music players will for now be unable to play the protected MP3s, although firmware updates could change that.

Will these be the MP3 files that no one wants? WMA and AAC are already dominating the DRM music market and there seems to be little space for a third competitor. MP3 does have the brand recognition that WMA and AAC lack, but it is highly doubtful that online music retailers will jump ship on the more-established DRM codecs for the better-known MP3. DRMed MP3s could also lead to greater consumer confusion as customers download the files only to discover that they will not play on their iPods, Rios, or any other player. Look for WMA and AAC to continue waging a battle for supremacy while MP3 remains relegated to the niche it currently inhabits: consumers ripping their CD libraries for use on their PCs and digital music players.

Original text by Eric Bangeman