INTERACT FORUM
More => Old Versions => JRiver Media Center 22 for Mac => Topic started by: dmitch77 on February 12, 2017, 11:13:08 am
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This looks like a bug. I have disabled the "Also store image in the file's tag" option under Options > File Locations > Cover Art. But still, when I select a song and fetch cover art from the Internet, the song file is updated. I really want the file left alone because this screws up iTunes and syncing to my iPhone when it happens on music in my iTunes folder.
MC 22.0.22, MacOS 10.12.
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It probably was updating something else in the file. You can examine the file with an external tool and see if it actually embedded the image or not.
If you want MC to never write anything to your files, you can engage this option:
Tools > Options > General > Importing and Tagging > Update tags when file info changes > (uncheck)
Brian.
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It probably was updating something else in the file.
What would that something else be? All I did was fetch cover art from the Internet. I was watching the file in question in the Finder and it updated the moment that MC fetched the cover art.
You can examine the file with an external tool and see if it actually embedded the image or not.
OK, there is still no image in the file. But still, why would the file get updated?
Thanks!
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^ I'm really not sure what it's updating. My *GUESS* is that it's writing a tag with the *location* of the image file. I.E.: C:\MC_Pictures\album_cover_name.jpg .
But I don't know. You could test it with an external tool and do a before and after. Maybe save a copy of the file, update the image, then look at the old saved file versus the newly updated file. Again, I'm guessing.
Brian.
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Interesting...what MC wrote were these two new tags:
Tool Name : Media Center
RATING : 0
Seems a little odd. But that's what was happening.
Thanks.
----dpm
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Interesting...what MC wrote were these two new tags:
Tool Name : Media Center
RATING : 0
Seems a little odd. But that's what was happening.
Thanks.
----dpm
There was a bug a while ago involving ratings when files hadn't been rated. I forget exactly what the problem was, but I guess the fix was to set the rating to 0 when dealing with unrated files in certain situations.