Hello, Jim and the rest of Team JRiver. My use case for JRiver is for remote listening -- either streaming off of my iPhone or, as in today, sitting in my office in downtown Minneapolis with a nice little desktop system.
I had been running JRiver at home very successfully on a ComputerAudiophile-designed CAPSZuma server (i7 processor, 16Gb RAM) using Windows Server 2016 in Desktop Experience mode optimized with Audiophile Optimizer 2.20.
Well, now I went and changed things.
I now have JRiver up and running on the same server, but with Windows Server 2019 in Desktop Experience mode optimized with Audiophile Optimizer 3.00.
Here's what's going on:
In my office downtown, I remote back home using MC24 24.0.75 64 bit. JRiver is properly connecting back home to my library and presents all folders, subfolders and files as expected. I have made no changes to my downtown setup. When I go to play a track -- FLAC, SACD, it doesn't seem to matter -- the software looks as though it is about to start playing -- and then the error message "Playback Problem -- Something went wrong with playback" appears, but without any further indication of why.
In a similar vein, I listen to JRiver using JRemote on my iPhone 7 Plus, running iOS 12.3.1. JRemote continues to properly connect to my home and I can pick files to play without problem. However, any file I attempt to play now produces the error message "Audio streaming error -- there was a problem playing the current audio file."
A postulated theory: all my music at home on my Synology NAS is read by JRiver through the path \\N7700\Media. Now, when I set up the server yesterday with Windows Server 2019, it would not allow me to access the NAS. So, I associated the drive letter J with \\N7700\Media using the "net use" command. I note that in my other music playback application, Roon, I had to go into the "storage" settings in the Roon app to change the path for all music, and for nightly library backups, from \\N7700\Media to J. In this light, I am wondering if I need to reassign similarly for JRiver. I note that the library I am accessing is the restored library from when I was running Windows Server 2016 the day before, using the \\N7700\Media path -- and that is the path still showing in the filenames of my remote library at my office.
If you indeed think that I'm on to something, I assume there is some batch way to change all library folder and file prefixes in JRiver from \\N7700\Media to J, but I don't know how to do that. Might be the first place to start to fix this.
Thanks in advance for your assistance. Cheers. JCR