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FAQ
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LibriVox provides many wonderful audiobooks to start. They even have a M4B download option which is the format that works best with BookPlayer.
You can also easily combine the MP3 files from audiobooks you bought on CD using the tools found below.
While BookPlayer supports playing MP3 just fine, it really shines when used with M4B based audio books.
To create these, there are several tools at your disposal:
- Audiobook Binder (Mac, Free)
- AudiobookConverter (Windows, Mac, Free)
- Audiobook Creator (Windows, Free, requires iTunes or Quicktime installed)
- fre:ac (Windows, Mac, Linux, Free)
- Audiobook Builder (Mac, Free trial available from their website)
We do not have any affiliation with any of these tools. If you find something that works better for you, please tell us so we can extend our list.
Combining your files not only makes it easier to handle them, but also makes it easier for BookPlayer to display the right artwork and chapters.
If for any reason you prefer to keep your books as a list of mp3s, you can also make use of our Volume feature from within the app. That is to say, you can convert any playlist of mp3s into a single book volume, which will have those mp3s as the chapters. One of the advantages of having your playlists as volumes, is that the bookmarks you create, will apply to the entire volume, as opposed to playlists, which only applies the bookmark to the current file you're listening to.
There are two main scenarios where you'll be able to use this feature:
- When you import multiple books at once, you'll be prompted to either move them into a playlist, or combine them into a volume
- For existing items in your library, there are two ways to go about it:
- If you already have your books organized in playlists, then just go to the playlist's options (by swiping left on the playlist, or by tapping Edit in the top right corner, selecting the playlist, and tapping the '...' button in the bottom floating bar), and choose 'Combine into Volume'
- You can also select existing books (not a mix of books and playlists), and combine them into a single volume via the option shown by tapping the '...' button mentioned before
BookPlayer supports three ways to import audiobooks:
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Airdrop. This is a bluetooth-enabled feature, which Apple devices support, so if you have a Mac, you can transfer your books directly to your phone by dragging and dropping.
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Third-party local apps. Other apps you may have installed in your phone (like Dropbox, Google Drive), will notify the phone that they are ‘File Providers’, making their files available for any app in the phone. If you have one of these type of apps installed, they will be listed alongside your iCloud ‘Folder’ in the file picker.
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iTunes File Sharing. This requires iTunes installed and it’s independent of platform (you can do it if you have a Windows or a Mac).
We have received feedback that after selecting multiple files and pressing 'Done' nothing happens.
What is actually happening, is that the native Files
app is downloading the files, but it's not presenting the feedback necessary, and BookPlayer doesn’t get any notification about the selection, until all the selected files are downloaded.
Unfortunately, this means that once the screen to import files is presented, the control and interaction is out of our hands, until a selection has been made and our app is notified by the phone operating system.
The lack of downloading feedback, could be either a bug on Apple’s part, or a bug in the implementation of these file providers (apps like Google Drive, Dropbox, etc).
We recommend testing first with one file and see if the Files
app present the proper feedback. Otherwise we'd recommend one of the other two options to import audiobooks that BookPlayer has.