I love Gmail. Conversation views, labels, keyboard macros and super fast search – it makes my life easier. One thing I also love are the email contact groups. It’s like tagging for humans and I love to categorize the people who email me (podcaster, blogger, fan, booker, musician, artist, family, mortal enemy, etc).
But it’s not as easy to group people as it should be. Here’s my easy to read prototype that I’d appreciate you forward to anyone you know at Google:

Instead of having to mouse over a contact name, get that card to show up, click More, click Contact Details, click Groups and select the group, instead I propose that all that be right in that popup. Amazing idea! I’m a genius!
Anyway, I’m sorry for the tone of voice. It’s mostly due to the hour I just wasted trying to get Greasemonkey to do exactly this. I love you Gmail, I could never stay mad at you.
Posted to
contacts,
gmail,
google,
organization by Brad on 7/03/08 @ 9:10 pm |
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One exhaustive search and some tireless tagging later, my sample library dreams are mostly realized. The winner? MediaMonkey 3.0 beta. Voila:

MediaMonkey 3 adds support for multiple genres and a “track browser” similar to the one I like in foobar. It doesn’t work exactly as I want — I’d like to have two genre columns and be able to select, say “drums” and “kick” and have it exclusively display samples that are tagged “drums” AND “kick”. But it doesn’t — it shows any that are tagged drums OR any that are tagged kick. But doing keyword or keyword -> album is still a great improvement over simple directory hierarchies.
It’s also really helpful rating samples that I use frequently. MediaMonkey 3 also supports multiple libraries, all the file formats under the sun, drag and drop to Ableton Live works good and it’s totally free, woooo.
And here for your benefit are the results of my many media player experiences trying to find the right sample organization client:
foobar2000 v0.9.5 - Just… complicated. Need foo_custominfo to handle WAV format genre metadata. Then that data doesn’t work in the facets view, etc, etc. I’m sure some foobar hacker could make it do what I want, but I don’t have the time or energy.
musikCube - Has facet view, does drag and drop, doesn’t do multiple genres.
Winamp - Sort of does what I want with enough wrestling — though the interface is a little retarded in the mind. But it won’t do sample drag and drop to Ableton Live, so you’re out.
wxMusic - Crashed reading in my media library and gave me lots of warnings that it couldn’t read certain WAV files.
mp3rat - mp3rat only does MP3s I guess. Imagine that.
I just saved you a lot of thankless work. Enjoy!
With completing all recording and sequencing on my next album and me regaining my enthusiasm for making new music, a complete sample library reset is in order. I’m a sample hoarder but my current setup (30-40 gigs of loops and samples in d:\music\samples\ subdirectories) has always been awful. The hierarchy’s all wrong and it sucks to browse. For a long time I’ve wanted a del.icio.us tagging style sample browser but I understand it’s a limited market.
But lately I’ve been using the latest beta of foobar2000 for my mp3 listening and organization. One thing I totally love about it is the facet view:
You can enter a search query or click in any of the panels (you can choose what tag you want each facet to be based on) and it narrows down the other panels based on your selection or search query. It’s really fantastic and makes it easy to explore your collection.
So a light bulb went off last night: this is exactly what I want for my samples! With some help from the foobar2000 forums I set up another copy of foobar and had it index my sample directories. Big problem: foobar saves all the metadata to the actual audio files — .WAV files don’t support genre metadata. Boned.
I’ve been scrabbling around trying to make foobar do what I want with various plugins but it’s a pain in the ass. Now I’m on to trying other media players…
Posted to
music,
nerdy,
organization,
samples,
software by Brad on 12/08/07 @ 12:32 pm |
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