Hi Matt,
Thanks for responding. You're right that that quote sounded a bit inflammatory, and it definitely sounds like something I might have said in the past (though I can't find when/where when I google for it). I'm trying not to be inflammatory any more - it certainly hasn't helped my cause to date. To the extent I have been I apologize.
Media Center was the first audio program to embrace Replay Gain, about 10 years ago.
Media Center was first to do a
lot of things, and does most things better than anyone else - that's why I've used it forever and championed it to friends. I wouldn't be surprised if MC was my introduction to Replay Gain.
Media Center 17 makes it possible to apply Replay Gain while converting for a handheld.
I agree, your handheld conversion/syncing capability is fantastic for all sorts of reasons. And a few years ago you changed it so the replaygain tags added to my flacs by foobar would survive conversion to ogg, which has been my work-around ever since.
I think you're asking for Media Center to write Album Gain tags.
Exactly!
We don't do this because Album Gain is a calculated field in Media Center (meaning we don't do a second analyze pass on the full album). You can argue the technical merits of this approach, but switching is not "very, very simple."
I'll get back to this in a second.
We could simply write the calculated album gain values to the tags, but I'm not sure if that change would be welcomed by other users.
If you make it an option, disabled by default, then I can't imagine a
single user would find it unwelcome.
I'm really trying to understand what is going on here. First you say it's not simple, then you actually use the word "simply" in a description of how to do exactly what I want.
What has been frustrating for me is that you guys are excellent coders, but even better than that you're great
system designers - you really think about how everything should work, you're thinking about the future, expandability, compatibility, etc. You don't just code yourself into a corner and hack your way out. I instantly recognized that over 10 years ago when I was looking for software to manage and organize my music collection.
So I have never understood why you seem to have no desire to address the (to my knowledge)
only area where you fall a little short, and lesser software like foobar and winamp actually does a better job. I honestly thought in 2006 (or whenever) that you'd appreciate the suggestions and research I did to bring this to your attention and let you know what needs to be changed to be more compatible with the outside world.
I don't understand the comment that adding this feature/tag is in any way going to mess anything up - have it turned off by default if that's a concern.
I also don't buy that this is hard for you guys to do. You guys have proven you can do anything better than your competitors. JimH mentioned there's a lot of time in the backend - QA, etc., and that's a good point. So it's not that it's
hard, it's that for some reason (possibly a very good one) you don't want to do it enough to spend the resources/$$$ on implementing it. I understand that there's a lot of different, higher priority features you'd rather spend your resources on. But how does this not get addressed major version after major version?
And I certainly don't understand the idea that this is not a useful option. It's the only way I can keep albums playing on my Rockbox at the uniform ReplayGain level while maintaining the original relative volume of the album tracks. And I know there are lots of people using MC with Rockbox and other players where this matters.
I have a work-around (though not all of your customers are technical enough to do what I do or understand the root cause of the issue), so I'll be fine (if slightly inconvenienced) if it never gets addressed. At this point I'd really just like to understand why there's no interest in this. Is my usage case really that insignificant?
-Fred