What prompted me to install Daemon Tools earlier today was one specific task I'm trying to achieve. I want to 'decrypt' a few score of WMA files that I downloaded from Tesco UK some months ago, originally used to burn a CD for my wife. I'd now like to listen to the tracks on my PC, but they won't play in my prefered player, MediaMonkey. They do play in WMP9, Creative Player etc, but I use MediaMonkey for its library facilities, so I'd prefer to play the music there. The WMAs are apparently 'encrypted' or 'licensed' - i.e. they have this DRM stuff preventing my using them as freely as I believe I should be able to, bearing in mind I paid for them.
The method I used so far is to play each WMA in WMP9 while recording in Goldwave, and then saving with a new name, but that's rather tedious and I'm hoping to find a quicker way.
Elsewhere, after much googling, I found the following guidance:
1. Copy the CDs to the disk file image .NRG with Nero.
2. Mount image file as virtual CD drive.
3. Setup from that.
I have Nero Express (part of OEM package that came with my DVD writer a few months ago) and I've just done step 1, ending up with a .nrg file about 1GB in size. I've now used Daemon to 'mount' that file. But what do I do now please? IOW, what does "Setup from that" really mean?
Any no-brainer help would be much appreciated please.
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Terry, West Sussex, UK
The method I used so far is to play each WMA in WMP9 while recording in Goldwave, and then saving with a new name, but that's rather tedious and I'm hoping to find a quicker way.
Elsewhere, after much googling, I found the following guidance:
1. Copy the CDs to the disk file image .NRG with Nero.
2. Mount image file as virtual CD drive.
3. Setup from that.
I have Nero Express (part of OEM package that came with my DVD writer a few months ago) and I've just done step 1, ending up with a .nrg file about 1GB in size. I've now used Daemon to 'mount' that file. But what do I do now please? IOW, what does "Setup from that" really mean?
Any no-brainer help would be much appreciated please.
--
Terry, West Sussex, UK
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