Wondershare Music Converter is, as the name suggests, a converter for music files. Its main purpose is – obviously – the conversion of one music format to the other. It does offer several additional features including the ability to extract music from video files and removing DRM from audio files.
The interface of the program uses a simplistic design. Video and audio files can be added easily by using the Add button in the header of the interface. It is possible to select multiple files at once which are then added all to the queue.
Each file is listed with its name and duration. Basic playback controls are available at the bottom of the screen to preview files before they are converted.

Wondershare Music Converter supports a wide range of input formats:
Music files ( *.wma; *.mp3; *.wav; *.m4a; *.aac; *.ac3; *.ogg; *.ape; *.mka)
Windows Media Video (*.wmv; *.asf)
Apple Video files(*.m4v)
Apple Music files(*.m4a; *.m4b; *.m4p;*.m4r)
Flash Video files (*.flv)
MPEG4 files (*.mp4)
Mobile Phone 3GP files (*.3gp)
Quick Time files (*.mov)
Windows AVI Video files (*.avi)
MPEG files (*.mpg; *.mpeg)
DVD VOB files (*.vob)
Video CD files (*.dat)
Real Media files (*.rm; *.rmvb)
MKV Files (*.mkv)
High-definition files (*.m2ts; *.tp; *.trp; *.ts)
Audible Enhanced Format(*.aax)
Audible Audiobook AA etc.
The footer contains a selection menu to select the output format for the queued files and the output path where the files will be saved to.
Supported output formats:
M4A – MPEG-4 Audio(*.m4a)
MP3-MPEG Layer-3 Audio(*.mp3)
AC3 – Dolby Digital AC-3(*.ac3)
AAC – Advanced Audio Coding(*.aac)
WMA – Windows Media Audio(*.wma)
WAV – Waveform Audio(*.wav)
OGG – Ogg Vorbis Audio(*.ogg)
M4B – MPEG-4 Audio(*.m4b)
APE,MKA(Matroska)Audio
DVR-MS
The files that are generated will automatically be stripped of any DRM that may have been included in the original files.
Wondershare Music Converter is a simple program to convert video and audio files to audio. The drm removal option makes it interesting for users who regularly purchase music that is protected by drm.
Installation:
The program will automatically open a page on the developer’s website. This page contains a form at the top where the user needs to enter an email address and name. The key for the software will be displayed on the page directly after pressing the get the code now button. It will also be send to the email address that the user entered in the form.
It is also possible to click on the Get Keycode link in the program if the website does not open automatically.
The program can be freely downloaded and registered today only. Just visit the Giveaway of the Day website to download the program and follow the installation instructions above. The developer’s website can be found here.
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Hey, Martin. Again, it’s awesome to see you doing these reviews. Two quick questions though. Are you going to include any kind of rating based on your opinion of the software (being thumbs up/ down or numerical rating or even just a “worth a shot or not”), and do you intend to list any kind of freeware alternative for those that dont want or miss the give away?
Thanks again for filling this void. Much needed.
Rush I’m not sure about ratings. I for now thought to only review the programs that provide some use to computer users and that I would use. I could change that to reviewing all programs on the other hand which would include reviewing “bad” software as well. What do others think about this? I’d probably stick with a thumbs up / down approach though instead of a numerical rating system.
Providing freeware alternatives is an interesting option although it is sometimes difficulty to find alternatives.
I don’t think ratings or thumbs up/down are needed.
It seems obvious that you are reviewing apps you yourself find interesting (and hence hopefully not bad) – and besides, you are good at listing the key features of the programs and quirks of the installations etc. – excellent reviews, in short – hopefully we as readers can then make up our own mind whether we want to try out the program or not.
But if you were to change/add something, I must say, that I really like the way the gaming site Kotaku “rates” games: At the end of a review, they list the key points they like and the key points they dislike (i.e. good a old explicit Pro/Con list) – they just call it Loved/Hated.
They even colour-code it so my stupid ass won’t mistake the pros for the cons :-P – But this is really nice – helps give the reader an overview of the game/program/whatever in a split-second.
I think the thumbs up idea is probably more diplomatic because one man’s tipple is another man’s poison ‘n’ all that.
Back to the review, not something I would use because i’m a Foobar user but Wondershare MC has an impressive feature list. Wonder why they have .APE support which they presumably have to pay a license for but no flac which is free! and arguably more widely used.
Not so keen on giveaway of the day personally , rather than givewaway’s, I see them more as extended trials, there is no way to register the programs again after a fresh install. That’s ok for those that only get a fresh install with a new PC I guess.
Womble I did not check but was not there a way to record the Registry edits done during installation so that they could be re-written after new installs of the operating system?
That is certainly true Martin, I used something once to make an unattended install disc. Clever solution!
Sorry to spam this thread but by chance I just came across this whilst looking into something entirely different and I immediately thought of our discussion here.
Here is a useful tool for comparing the registry before and after an installation….
http://sourceforge.net/projects/regshot/
Truthfully, I don’t waste my time with the ones I dont think I might use. I think you are right. It’s better to not even bother with those. Saves everyone time, energy and the occasional Revo session. Good thinking.