![]() I have different views for my videos which are organized in a similar fashion. I also have statistical information about my master library like the total number of artists, albums, genres, dates, bit depths, and bit rates. So, I have one master library and all of my audio folders and files are organized by different audio codecs like FLAC, AAC, HE-AAC, L.A.M.E. I carefully read the official JRiver Wiki about creating custom views and panes and I just finished organizing my single and master private media library I backed up the media library and synchronized it on both PCs. Is there any way I can fix my missing metadata using these software products or can you recommend another third-party and free software application to fix them? I think I am getting closer to discovering the root cause of my JRiver problems with each follow-up post in my thread. How do I quickly fix my metadata problems for my AAC and HE-AAC folders? I thought Illustrate's dBPowerAMP Reference 16.2 64 bit took care of this, but I do own Perfect Tunes 2.1 64 bit. JRiver Media Center 23 32 bit imported the AAC and HE-AAC folders and files, but my metadata must be incorrect because I can not see my artists and albums in Audio -> Artists or Albums in both my AAC and HE-AAC independent libraries. I loaded my AAC and HE-AAC libraries one at a time and I checked the Audio -> Files. I am fine with switching among different independent libraries. For example, my audio books, videos, high-resolution music albums, and pictures are imported within each independent library, but I labeled each one based on the broad category such as lossless, OGG Vorbis, AAC, HE-AAC, and L.A.M.E. With regard to multiple libraries, I did import my entire private media library into each independent library I created independent libraries for each lossy audio codec. Just import audio, audio books and video into one library and be happy. But for audiobooks and videos, having a separate library doesn't make a lot of sense in most cases. ![]() It *might* make sense to have a separate low res library for your lossy files, depending up on how you intend to use those files. Just know that with Views, you really don't need separate libraries at all. If you aren't bothered by switching libraries constantly to find your content, then it might be OK for you. ![]() You probably don't want to use 3, 4, or more libraries. If this doesn't work, I'm not sure why your files are not being imported.ģ. If not, just to be extra sure, type a file name of one of the AAC files in the search box and see if you can locate it that way. Then drill down into a directory that you know has these AAC files and try to find one. It's possible that your files have been imported, but the metadata is incorrect or incomplete. You are clearly using the 32 bit version. OM was speculating that you were *already* using it and that might be the source of your problem. ![]()
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