The need for such a solution is quite obvious, at least for audio connoisseurs: the OGG format, although an open-source, royalty-free standard, is less advertised compared to other audio formats, despite its superiority in many aspects. Vorbis compression is comparable (if not better) than MP3 one, but unfortunately very few portable players support it, so if your player only supports MP3 files and you got some Ogg Vorbis files, you need to convert them from Vorbis to MP3. Can you convert wma to mp4 click here to find out more: http://www.magicaudiotools.com/convert-wma-to-mp4 will listen wma2mp4 windows well
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