I was pretty skeptical at first, but to my surprise, fetching metadata from Audible turned out to be genuinely useful.
I’ve just submitted AudioBo 1.2.3, which includes this feature along with a bunch of smaller improvements.

I was pretty skeptical at first, but to my surprise, fetching metadata from Audible turned out to be genuinely useful.
I’ve just submitted AudioBo 1.2.3, which includes this feature along with a bunch of smaller improvements.

Little demo: pulling book metadata from public online databases.
I genuinely didn’t expect it to work this well.
And thanks to the sidecar chapters I added in the previous update, AudioBo can now apply the correct chapter markers to pretty much any audiobook rip.

#AudioBo 1.2.0 is out.
Recently, a friend told me that thanks to AudioBo he managed to get through six audiobooks in just the last two months.
That honestly made me really happy to hear.
#AudioBo 1.1.9 is out.
#AudioBo 1.1.8 is out. Mostly some tiny UX tweaks and improvements.
Up next: export audiobooks in MP3 and M4A formats, not only M4B.
This #AudioBo review is longer than some audiobooks I've converted.
But seriously – every frustration he describe is exactly why AudioBo exists. I was that person fighting ancient apps and arbitrary limits.
When your user's pain matches your pain 1:1... you know you built the right thing.
#AudioBo 1.1.7 is out. A lot of tiny tweaks and improvements.
#AudioBo 1.1.4 i out:
– Converter now remembers the last export preset you used — including your custom one
– Added support for very high sample rates (88.2 kHz and 96 kHz) when working with FLACs
– New Settings window (⌘,) for managing language, export folder, and more
– You can now choose a default export folder — no need to pick a location every time
– Batch Rename now highlights added text in green so you can preview changes before applying