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Jaikoz vs songkong
Jaikoz vs songkong




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Simply take your time to get used to it, because it's really worth it. On the downside, the program offers so much information and such a handful of options that its interface may feel overwhelming at first sight. Jaikoz is definitely a very powerful tag editor, making the task of organizing a massive music collection a bit easier and faster. As an extra, Jaikoz can automatically synchronize the new data with your iTunes library. Of course, you also have the possibility to fine-tune all these changes manually and see a preview before actually applying them.

jaikoz vs songkong

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The program connects to online music databases and downloads all the necessary data to fill in tag fields, correct file names, get album covers, and even download lyrics.

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Maybe they will now.The best thing about Jaikoz is that manual editing is limited to the minimum.

jaikoz vs songkong

I just can't believe, with storage space being as cheap as it is, that Apple can't just up the Touch to 160 gb. I may just get the 64gb ipod touch down the road if my classic dies. I'm at around 10k songs, and I believe at add around 300-400 or so a year, so hitting the 20k ceiling is not an immediate concern of mine. ― Your Favorite Album in the Cutout Bin, Tuesday, Janu11:10 AM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post I'm assuming that if you download something from the cloud onto your phone that wasn't previously synced on it, it's going to give you whatever janky mastering is currently on iTunes, but as long as I have the original on my Mac's HD, I don't care. I upgraded a few lousy rips on my computer, and left the rest as-is. The nice thing is if you have a lousy 128k rip of a track, you can replace it with a DRM-free 256k AAC that is yours to keep even if you let your iTunes Match subscription lapse. I tried iTunes Match for a year but I didn't renew, mainly because I was frustrated I had to painstakingly whittle my collection down to fit under their 20,000 track limit.Īt first, I was nervous about iTunes Match replacing tracks with alternate versions (Do we really need remasters of albums released in the 1990s?), but it only replaces tracks if you specifically ask it to. I had no idea until a few weeks ago that Apple discontinued the classic or I would have bought an extra one.

jaikoz vs songkong

― you've got no fans you've got no ground (anagram), Tuesday, Janu3:12 AM (Yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post You can still get new or nearly new iPod classics on ebay but they've quadrupled in price since they were discontinued. I've backed up all my songs to an external drive and when my current iPod dies Imma copy everything over. What I did – which you should also have done – is snap up a new one before Apple discontinued them. I'm in the same position as you, I have a 160GB iPod with about 10,000 songs on it which I figure is going to give up eventually.

jaikoz vs songkong

Fiio has promised to fix this in a later firmware update, though. For any tracks beyond that, you have to play the albums via the folder view, they won't show in the alvums view, I have a 64GB MicroSD card and almost all of my tracks are FLACs or WAVs, the total track number on the card is around 2000, so it's not a problem for me, but I would imagine it'd be problem if you had mostly MP3s and/or a 128GB card. However, with the current firmware, the player can only index a maximum of 5400 tracks.

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(And obviously you can create playlists on the player itself, plus there's also a "favourite tracks" option, which I find really useful.) Apparently this feature wasn't in the original firmware, but the later version (1.1) included it, that's why some older reviews say it doesn't support playlists. I haven't tried it yet, but the manual says you can create playlists on the computer an import them on the X1. I just bought the FiiO X1 and it does support playlists. I don't really want to use my cell phone as a media player because battery life on cell phones tends not to be so good. How's the UI on the FiiO players? That's what I'll probably go with next, but I've heard for instance it doesn't support playlists, which makes me a little wary.






Jaikoz vs songkong