In addition to a powerful Spotify DRM removal tool, it also works as a professional Spotify to MP3 converter so that you can decrypt and convert any Spotify music file, including single track, albums, playlists and artists to plain MP3, AAC, WAV, FLAC, and other common audio formats as you wish.
Download & convert Spotify music tracks, playlists, albums, artists to MP3, AAC, WAV, FLAC, M4A, M4B
Thus TunesKit Spotify Music Converter for Mac comes out to free Spotify users from DRM for good! With this smart Spotify converter, subscribers can now take full control of your Spotify music songs by easily downloading all tracks, artists, albums as well as playlists from Spotify while completely stripping off the DRM protection with high quality. Break DRM protection from all Spotify songs and playlistsĭRM restriction on Spotify prevents us from playing the music offline. This would involve some kext development and coding that I'm unfortunately not too skilled at.TunesKit Spotify Converter 1.5.0 TNT.zip (6.49 MB)Ī mighty and smart Spotify music converter to download Spotify songs, playlists, albums, artists as well as convert any track from Spotify to plain MP3, M4A, AAC, WAV, M4B, FLAC for any music player, like iPod, Zune, Creative Zen, etc. I'm wondering what type of behavior we can get if we can somehow kill displayport in the OS, or how dpcp works in OSX if we can somehow kill that. There must be an issue regarding DPCP compliance between monitors, unfortunately I cannot find anywhere in the product specs that the Acer B243PWL monitor has DPCP support. When using this monitor both the MacPro and the Hackintosh could not display protected iTunes content. We also have an ASUS VG248QE monitor available to test! This particular monitor has the nVidia g-sync modification kit and does NOT work when connected, with the g-sync kit there is ONLY a displayport connector to the monitor, the modification strips out the hdmi and dvi connectors leaving only a displayport connector. It would seem based on this that when the system has a displayport connector present, the monitor must have a displayport connector and be dpcp compliant. I then tested with the dvi adapter, and predictably, no playback. I used an hdmi->dvi adapter on the MacPro and itunes video did NOT play using this setup, I tested the dvi connector director from my GTX780 and again, same behavior. The hackintosh had no problems and I was floored to see this.Īcer B243PWL Ajbmdrz - Via the displayport connector iTunes video plays on both systems with no issues, however this monitor does not have an HDMI connector.
For connecting the hackintosh to the acer B243PWL Ajbmdrz I used a displayport cable.įor the monitors here is how it boils down:Īcer H236HL - this monitor only has DVI and hdmi connections, itunes protected video does not play.Īpple Cinema display 27 (2010 model)" - iTunes protected/HD video plays on BOTH systems flawlessly. For the MacPro to the Acer B243PWL Ajbmdrz I used a thunderbolt/displayport cable found at amazon I also used this same cable to connect my hackintosh to the apple cinema display. I did not test my ud5h's displayport connection, I only tested it through my graphics card. The results on both systems is identical, as the MacPro has an HDMI port I tested the HDMI port and display port on the GTX780. The MacPro is the new late 2013 variant, my Hackintosh is a Haswell 4770k on a gigabyte z87x ud5h with an eVGA GTX 780 (2781) The reason the screen goes blank is because the video stream is being routed through DPCP and can only display via the displayport or thunderbolt jack. The issue has to do with having a displayport connector in your system, apparently osx on any system with a displayport jack coming from the motherboard or graphics card is forcing DPCP in place of HDCP authentication. The behavior is reproducible on my hackintosh as well as his new MacPro. I have done some pretty extensive testing to arrive at this information, I've tested on a new MacPro that a friend has and tested on several different monitors (including an apple cinema display). Building a CustoMac Hackintosh: Buyer's Guide