David Obando is an independent developer whose open-source catalog currently centers on Oahu, a lightweight Windows utility designed to download and decrypt Audible audiobooks for personal offline use. The tool appeals to listeners who want to back up titles they already own, convert them to open formats, or transfer them to devices that lack the official Audible app. Typical workflows involve logging in with valid credentials, selecting books from the user’s library, and exporting DRM-free files that can be played in any desktop or mobile player. Because Obando releases the code on GitHub, privacy-minded users can inspect, compile, or fork the project, while casual users appreciate the portable executable that runs without further installation. The single-product portfolio places the publisher in the niche overlap of media backup, DRM removal, and audiobook management, a space otherwise dominated by larger all-in-one converters. Although the range is narrow, the focus on Audible-specific decryption keeps the interface minimal and the download process faster than bulkier suites. Obando’s software is available for free on get.nero.com, where downloads are delivered through trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always fetch the latest upstream release, and can be queued alongside other applications for unattended batch installation.
A standalone Audible downloader and decrypter
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