Brian
Sorry for the confusion. I'll try to get this back on track.
On to more confusion. I would usually try to make it easier to see who is saying what to whom by showing quotes from your replies in another color or another font. When I do this, I don't see any visual confirmation that I have done anything. This is what started the problem I had with my last post. It was apparent that I had attached an image to my post, as the file path was shown, but I couldn't see the attachment. Now, in this post, when I change the color or the font, nothing is different. I can't see the changes I have made. I've never worked in a word processor that works like this. Without confirmation of what I've done, it is awkward for me to use. There must be some simple thing here that I am missing. Not being able to style as I usually would, for this post, I'll try using titles and spacing to show what belongs with what. Very Awkward.
Brian said;
In this case, with the Chris Whitley album, you have 3 copies of every file:
1. The one you added meta data for, which is in: R:\audio files 169GB\Pauls CDs\
2. Another copy in: R:\EAC files 242GB\EAC new rips 2014\
3. Another copy in: R:\EAC files 242GB\new EAC 07-2014 97.8GB\
I'm guessing you have those 3 copies for most or all of the duplicates, but I have no way of knowing.
Tom replies;
Yes. I knew there were 3 copies. These are the 3 folders I initially loaded into JRiver. The unusual names actually do tell me the origin of the files. This goes back to a big editing project that will finally end with the properly edited files in the JRiver library. Almost there. JRiver did see the files a bit differently than I thought it would but this is not a big problem. As far as the content, I know what is what. The 2 "mystery" duplicates are the files I will ultimately discard and the files with the edited metadata will comprise the JRiver library.
What I want to do, what I don't know how to do, is to move some of these files to a Windows folder. This goes back to me being unable to see the relationship between JRiver files and Windows files. Initially, I want to cut and paste selected duplicate files from where they currently reside in JRiver to a new fresh folder in Windows. These will ultimately be deleted from the computer but I think it is premature to delete them at this time. I want to make certain that I don't delete my only copy of a song file. Then, I want to copy the resulting JRiver library into a new fresh folder in Windows to use as a back-up. There is probably a tool in JRiver that makes back-ups easily. Simply put, I want to transfer files between JRiver and Windows. I don't know how to do this.
The only other procedure I need to do is to load the files from my Mac into JRiver and do the same thing I did with the Windows files. I use Pure Vinyl/Pure Music, which uses iTunes as it's file structure. Those Mac files are in a proper order, at least according to iTunes view of proper. All of those files are .AIFF. I assume that once I understand the procedures that move files between JRiver and Windows, I'll use the same procedures to navigate between JRiver and Mac.
Brian said;
If you want to make your file and directory naming very standardized, regular, and consistent, we can definitely use the Rename, Move, and Copy files tool to put everything into a nice consistent directory structure with file names exactly as you want them.
I'd say let's get your mystery files sorted out first. Then, once those are dealt with, if you want to move all of your "good" files around, we can definitely help you do that.
Tom replies;
I looked at the Rename, Move and Copy files tool. It looked like it was about moving files within JRiver. If this tool will move files between JRiver, Windows computers, and Mac computers, that would be great.
I don't think of any of my files as "mystery" files. I can see how someone else might look at some of my stuff and think it a mystery.
Thinking about what I have written here as I write it, maybe I have over complicated all of this. Maybe the easiest best way to do this is forget about the intermediate step of moving the duplicate files back into Windows and simply delete them from the JRiver library. Then, use a back-up tool that I am certain must exist in JRiver to make the library back-up. Then, on to Mac.
Enough for now. I'm excited. I think I'm close to accomplishing something that has been out there for a long time. Wow!
Many, many thanks
Tom