That's a touch one going by the information you've supplied. Is the
folder containing the album's files located within the designated music
folder?
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JJZolx
JJZolx's Profile:
JJZolx;587368 Wrote:
That's a touch one going by the information you've supplied. Is the
folder containing the album's files located within the designated music
folder?
It is. I messed around with it some more and discovered that the files
are set as default to be hidden. I can always show
Skillet Liquor;587446 Wrote:
It is. I messed around with it some more and discovered that the files
are set as default to be hidden. I can always show hidden files in
any OS, but the Touch just cannot see them. FWIW, I have a 1TB USB
drive (with all of the music files on it) attached to the
garym;587463 Wrote:
use dbpa, foobar2000 or something to simply convert from flac to flac.
because lossless, this will not be a problem and maybe the new flac
files will be OK.
Thanks.
I tried using SoundConverter to convert the files to *.wav, but had no
success in getting the Touch to see
WAV has almost no tag support so no you wont see them under artist or
album.
You have to browse music folder via the music folder option too see
them
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Mnyb
Main hifi: Touch + CIA PS +MeridianG68J MeridianHD621
Skillet Liquor;587446 Wrote:
It is. I messed around with it some more and discovered that the files
are set as default to be hidden. I can always show hidden files in
any OS, but the Touch just cannot see them.
Selecting show hidden files in an OS does not necessarily make them
visible to
aubuti;587486 Wrote:
Selecting show hidden files in an OS does not necessarily make them
visible to the Touch. Do any of the elements of the albums path (eg,
artist name, album name, etc) start with a period or 'full stop'? If
so, take that out of the folder name and rescan.
EDIT: The
I'm having a weird problem. I recently bought and downloaded a FLAC
album from a label's website. The trouble is that the Touch cannot see
the folder or files therein. I can only see and play the files on my
computer by using VLC.
I don't think there's any DRM involved or anything like that.