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Registered: September 2, 2007 | Posts: 39 |
| Posted: | | | | I know this has been asked before but I can't find anything less than 4 years old, so something new might be on the market.
Some of the more sophisticated media players will sort of do it for pop CDs but are pretty woeful for classical stuff. For books you can do a roll-your-own with a competent database program but that means entering all the details and scanning the covers for several hundred shelf-feet of paperbacks plus a lot of audiobooks. I was looking for something with a shared database behind it like DVD Profiler. Actually, calibre gets close for audiobooks provided it is something that can be screenscraped from amazon or one or two other sites.
Any suggestions, or shall I stay with my spreadsheet based lists and forget a nice display with cover art etc? |
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Registered: March 14, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,819 |
| Posted: | | | | Hi
The program I recently discovered which I think is brilliant doesn't have a user-built database; but I still think it's excellent. It's also got a very good import feature.
It's called Numento. It's fully customisable and you can catalogue absolutely anything with it! |
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Registered: April 2, 2007 | Posts: 156 |
| Posted: | | | | | | | Karsten | | | Last edited: by karstenp |
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Registered: September 2, 2007 | Posts: 39 |
| Posted: | | | | Thanks for the suggestions guys, I'll give them both a try. Maybe as a project for my declining years I'll see if one or both can be wrapped in some tools to sync up with a user-contributed central database. Should keep me busy for a while ... |
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Registered: February 23, 2009 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,580 |
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Registered: September 2, 2007 | Posts: 39 |
| Posted: | | | | Ahhh, now that looks very promising.
CATraxx and Numento both look like competent programs, but with a large book collection having to enter all the data by hand is soul-destroying. Even if the database is not complete being able to do a high proportion by ISBN or even scanner is very helpful.
Thank you. |
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Registered: March 23, 2007 | Posts: 317 |
| Posted: | | | | I'm increasingly of the view that (for CDs) the best thing to do is to update the public sites and use your chosen music player.
Most music players get their information from one or more of a number of publicly updated databases such as FreeDB and MusicBrainz. If the information for a release is not accurate, it is because these public databases are not accurate.
It seems silly to me to pay for and contribute to something that will have a restricted user base when you can just update a public one for wider benefit.
Stuart | | | This is a sig... ... ... yay...
Don't understand? Maybe DVDProfilerWiki.org does! |
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Registered: March 13, 2007 | Posts: 1,380 |
| Posted: | | | | I record my CD's with Windows Media Player, and let the player get the tags for tracks. I then move the files to my proper music folder, and add the tracks to my main mp3 player foobar2000. Where i edit the tags to my specifications, add images etc. The program layout is very customizable, mine looks like that: |
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Registered: March 14, 2007 | Posts: 5,734 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting whispering: Quote: my main mp3 player foobar2000 foobar in use here too I record my CDs with EAC. | | | Don't confuse while the film is playing with when the film is played. [Ken Cole, DVD Profiler Architect] |
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Registered: September 2, 2007 | Posts: 39 |
| Posted: | | | | TBH, when I first asked this question I was more interested in the books than the CDs. I have enough books that the thought of keying in the data and scanning the covers is daunting. I'm currently experimenting with the trial version of the collectorz book app and although the backing database is thin on detail it does contain enough info to build a usable list complete with (front) cover art. I will probably buy it - I may even invest in a cheap scanner.
For music I use EAC to rip to FLAC and foobar2000/mastagger to tag. Playback is via logitect squeezebox into my hifi system. I find public sites adequate for pop music but classical requires far more effort to tag if you want to really use an online library - a basic set of tags would be something like <composer, title, movement, orchestra/ensembe, conductor/leader, soloist(s), opus, genre, type> with the ability to drill into the libraray along almost all of the tags (except movement). You also need a lot of short playlists as sequence is important for things like symphony or opera, and the playlist may span multiple CDs. Random choice of track is rarely desirable although random choice of playlist would be acceptable. The basic point, however, is that my (classical) music library is somewhat divorced from the concept of the CD so a basic listing app not aimed at playback might be useful, especially as it can also include vinyl etc. Whether or not I get the CD collectorz app probably depends on whether I lose the will to live while trying to get my books organized. |
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Registered: March 14, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,819 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting LenG: Quote: Numento both look like competent programs, but with a large book collection having to enter all the data by hand is soul-destroying. Even if the database is not complete being able to do a high proportion by ISBN or even scanner is very helpful.
Thank you. I used to use Collectorz, but grew to hate it. Also you have to pay for upgrades all the time. Numento allows you to scan barcodes (with a barcode scanner), I have yet to have it not find a cover for my books (I have over 2,000). Also, it's fully customisable on the fields you use - whereas Collectorz has lots of fields but you can't remove the ones you don't want to use. I was using MediaMan for my books and music, but went over to Numento because I prefered the 'look' of it and how customisable it is. The import was excellent, meaning that the only things I've had to do is a few personalisations. Also, since buying this program there have been 3 updates at no further cost. I don't know if there will be an upgrade fee for a major upgrade though. |
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Registered: February 23, 2009 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,580 |
| Posted: | | | | Pantheon, going a bit off topic here but do you think Numento is better than Game Collector? For the time being I use Game collector to keep track of my games collection and also put it on my iPhone to go. Just wondering ... | | | Blu-ray collection DVD collection My Games My Trophies |
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Registered: March 19, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 6,018 |
| Posted: | | | | @LenG: For music you might try OrangeCD Catalog. |
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Registered: March 14, 2007 | Reputation: | Posts: 1,819 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting Taro: Quote: Pantheon, going a bit off topic here but do you think Numento is better than Game Collector? For the time being I use Game collector to keep track of my games collection and also put it on my iPhone to go. Just wondering ... I only ever used Game Collector to track my board games (with a bit of adapting), but, personally, I think Numento is brilliant because you can change every single field to match your personal criteria, in addition to adding more fields. I was about to buy MediaMan (I really liked the bookshelf look of it), but I thought I'd do a quick search for another program. I found Numento and only used it for about an hour before buying it. It's got a really good, and very sensitive, search function (searches all fields), as well as three-tier sorting - which for my book collection is great as I can sort by Author, Series, volume etc. I honestly think that it's the best 25 euro I've every spent. |
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Registered: March 27, 2007 | Posts: 98 |
| Posted: | | | | Quoting LenG: Quote: TBH, when I first asked this question I was more interested in the books than the CDs. I have enough books that the thought of keying in the data and scanning the covers is daunting. I'm currently experimenting with the trial version of the collectorz book app and although the backing database is thin on detail it does contain enough info to build a usable list complete with (front) cover art. I will probably buy it - I may even invest in a cheap scanner.
Although it is purely online have you looked at LibraryThing for your books. |
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Registered: March 17, 2007 | Posts: 43 |
| Posted: | | | | I know I'm a little late, but try this: BookCAT Almost 100% customizable, and very detail oriented. Plus, GREAT support when you need it. By far the best of it's kind. |
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