
When you finally get all your audiobooks into the Books app, and sync them onto your iPhone and iPad – something that iCloud can’t apparently do automatically – you then discover that each keeps track of your place independently, leaving you to sync them manually on each device.Įven before the last couple of months, audiobooks have proved very popular with users, many of whom complain about their poor support in Catalina’s Books app.
#Audiobook builder catalina software#
What should be slick and simple in Apple’s software turns out to be a jury rig. At present, the best app which I could find can’t use the track-based files generated by the Books app, so those discs either have to be ripped in the Music app or by third-party software, before being joined and imported to Books. Turning audiobooks on disc into single m4b audiobook files isn’t possible without third-party software. Its m4b format supports bookmarks, but Books doesn’t, apart from your current place in each audiobook that you’ve been listening to. Last week I took a look at how this worked out in practice, and realised that the Books app adds little in the way of features to support audiobooks that aren’t already available in the Finder, for unprotected items. Unlike Music and Photos, there’s no option to curate your own library, store it on another volume, or access its contents yourself. It then stores them, along with all my other audiobooks, in a viper’s nest buried in the private container of not the Books app, but a secret book service named BKAgentService, in a path something like ~/Library/Containers//Data/Documents/iBooks/Books/Audiobooks/sha1-98b188d2bf0f7694aeafb3ac3650088f054cf2ed/myBook.m4b. That will even rip them from disc if you wish, but as it isn’t aware that each audiobook consists of a great many tracks, it stupidly turns every individual track into a separate audiobook. Now Apple wants us to buy all our audiobooks from its store, and play them in the Books app. When Macs still came with internal optical drives, it was often easier just to play audiobooks from their original discs. So I have these huge playlists which sort of work. I ‘ripped’ many, but never had the time or patience to plod through iTunes relabelling every track.
#Audiobook builder catalina series#
My audio CD set of the complete series of those radio programmes is one of my most treasured audiobooks, one no longer available from online stores such as Apple’s.Īudiobooks have never been first class citizens in macOS, and those only available from third parties, particularly on CDs, are among the most disenfranchised. I didn’t realise it at the time, but in the summer of 1996 I would meet its author to talk about our common ground of Macs. There are few events in 1978 that I can recollect as clearly, but at 1030 on the evening of Wednesday 8 March I listened to the first broadcast episode of Douglas Adams’ radio series A Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy.
