While reading your post, I couldn't help but think that you might have a better experience if you re-thought your stance on not allowing anything into the library until it was "clean".
Doof,
Thanks! I am always looking for better ways to do things...so let's see what we have here....first - I guess some more background would help. I use MC to preside over what one would call an "uncommon" infrastructure...
A) Audiophile Zone
This is my commercial studio environment (that has the big gear and the nice DAC) to enjoy the lossless content. It's library is unique and only contains FLAC stored locally on the "A" workstation. No editing of files takes place in here - this room is playback only - all FLAC files are ripped, prepped and tagged on my personal workstation and then moved to this library. All content in here are considered "masters" and it's generally these masters that create the files for B) and C)
B) Desktop Listening Zone
I have 3 different "office" desktops around the place that use a process I borrowed from another forum member (MusicHawk). My personal workstation takes the MP3's created from the masters in A) and uses those files to create the official "desktop" library - which is synced daily to a share on my Windows Home Server. Using that share - a script runs on each workstation via SyncBack SE to ensure that a mirrored copy of the "desktop" library exists on all three workstations including the music, the views, the playlists, the custom tags etc etc.
C) Mobile Zone
I have three iPods currently on the go - each syncing different things. My iPod syncs to my personal ws and uses a special Smartlist to ensure I get only my stuff and not my sons "High School Musical 2" sound track or my wife's current obsession with Colbie Calliat. The same is true for the other iPods. My wife could care less about my new View containing Pitchforks Top 10 Albums of the 1990's.
To manage all of the above - tagging, renaming and conversion is critical. Due to the entire library residing on three different workstations - using the actual FLACs in the libraries is out of the question - hence the MP3 conversions. Also it goes without saying that FLAC and iPod do not get along - so conversion is critical for the mobile crowd. Basically - the use of MP3 makes it all possible. I can live with copies of a 30GB MP3 library on each workstation and MP3 is transparent for the iPods. It's the best I could come up with.
If you can offer suggestions on how to make a single central library work with the above and get rid of all this copying and crap - I am all for it.
If you're just looking to keep the "clean" free of the "unclean", then you could easily create a playlist called "Staging Area", add any "unclean" files to it, and then filter that playlist out of your View Schemes.
Then you could create a new View Scheme that only allows members of this playlist to be shown, and customize it to fit your workflow needs.
With the files actually in your library, you can then easily select multiple files, no matter where they are physically stored, and do batch converts, renames, cover art lookups, or whatever.
Sounds great - but what criteria would be used for a "staging" area playlist? Wouldn't I have to start tagging these files in some way to even get a list to populate - Yes? No? With a "standalone" area - MC isn't even in the picture - and I can just tag away without having to perform anything special. If I have to set something first on each "dirty" file - that kind of defeats the purpose - unless a playlist can be created to just show all files in a specific folder?
And while I am all for the files being in the MC "space" so to speak - it's all this right-clicking and repetitive farting around with menus that is making me a bit crazy. The whole point of this post was to start a discussion on "centralizing" tasks that I assume almost 95% of us would do. Granted some are not as picky as I am when it comes to library maintenance etc - but a proper prep/tag/rename process pays infinite dividends in the power of this app when you start using Smartlists etc etc..
I'm also not sure I understand the desire to have all of these nice lossless files available on disk, but then insist on listening to an MP3. If you're going to devote the drive space to the FLAC, then why not just listen to the FLAC?
See above. Due to the current "library" copying...FLAC is not an option. Again - I am all for a better solution that centralizes everything.
If you want an MP3 version on hand for things like transferring to a portable MP3 player, then you can have both versions of the file in your library and stack them, so that only the FLAC shows up, but both are available to MC for the portable player bit. Tag the FLAC file however you like and the information carries down through the MP3 version as well.
I am all ears on this! How does it work and how do I set it up?
Also, to answer a couple of other questions...
MC can import .CUE files. Check your Auto Import filetype settings and make sure that .CUE is selected. Once the .CUE sheet is imported, you can convert any or all of the tracks into whatever format you want. Just make sure you don't tell it replace the original on disk while you're doing this or MC will delete the backend .wav file after converting the first track and then the rest will fail.
So when you say "import" what exactly happens? Can I doubleclick a .cue file out in Explorer and then what happens? After messing around a bit - with the "drag to playlist" as mentioned by Sunfire - I see that I can load the individual tracks to a playlist and render them out but the resultant files were in a crap state - bad naming, cover art missing etc etc...so obviously I need to work this out a bit better.
MC has a Secure rip mode that you can set in the Advanced Ripping options. This behaves similarly, if not identically, to the way EAC rips discs.
Awesome!
You have given me some great ideas...and I really would appreciate your view on "centralizing" the library a bit better. Or maybe changing it up completely - my wife has been complaining as of late that she feels strapped since she cannot add anything to her "desktop" library because of the way SyncBack SE does it's thing. If she wants to make a playlist or rip a disc or tag any of "her" files - those changes are immediately lost at the next sync. Not the best way to allow freedom with the music...
Anyway - any suggestion you can throw my way would be appreciated.
Cheers!
VP