digital dave wrote:You mentioned that it uses the drive I'd and not the letter. What impact does that have?
The impact is that:
If you disconnect your drive and reconnect it later. There is a chance that Windows assign a new letter to it. (for example it could change from "I:" to "J:" )
In the case of that event Mediamonkey would be unable to locate the tracks and they would appear in Grey in the Mediamonkey library.
And you wouldn't be able to play them from Mediamonkey.
digital dave wrote:And how do you tag the tracks?
If you look at the main panel in Mediamonkey you'll see several columns with headers.
Each headers is corresponding to one type of tag. (for example: track, album, artist, genre, year, rating, ...)
You can edit the tags of a track or a selection of several track by doing: right click --> properties
There are several ways of tagging tracks. It's a vast subject.
I'll see if I can find some helping guides to further help you with that matter.
digital dave wrote:That would make sense and I think I have that covered. I have notices that sound analyzing would probably take a fair amount of time.
The volume analyzing for 90K tracks will take a lot of time indeed ( probably several days ).
While Mediamonkey is analyzing track volume, you're computer will probably feel a bit slow and sluggish.
The reason is that this operation needs a lot of computing power.
[quote="digital dave"]You mentioned that it uses the drive I'd and not the letter. What impact does that have?[/quote]
The impact is that:
If you disconnect your drive and reconnect it later. There is a chance that Windows assign a new letter to it. (for example it could change from "I:" to "J:" )
In the case of that event Mediamonkey would be unable to locate the tracks and they would appear in Grey in the Mediamonkey library.
And you wouldn't be able to play them from Mediamonkey.
[quote="digital dave"]And how do you tag the tracks?[/quote]
If you look at the main panel in Mediamonkey you'll see several columns with headers.
Each headers is corresponding to one type of tag. (for example: track, album, artist, genre, year, rating, ...)
You can edit the tags of a track or a selection of several track by doing: right click --> properties
There are several ways of tagging tracks. It's a vast subject.
I'll see if I can find some helping guides to further help you with that matter.
[quote="digital dave"]That would make sense and I think I have that covered. I have notices that sound analyzing would probably take a fair amount of time. [/quote]
The volume analyzing for 90K tracks will take a lot of time indeed ( probably several days ).
While Mediamonkey is analyzing track volume, you're computer will probably feel a bit slow and sluggish.
The reason is that this operation needs a lot of computing power.