I have a folder of MP3s, some of which date back to 1999, just a few years after the format was popularised. Most of them have utterly terrible names (think RIDEONAM.MP3). I think at this point they might even survive the heat death of the universe. And they’ll still be terribly-organised.

  • ggtdbz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    15 hours ago

    Oh I’ve been looking for something like this for a long time. I wonder how this integrates into something like Jellyfin if I want to host my own personal music streaming for myself.

    • AnExerciseInFalling@programming.dev
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      13 hours ago

      In addition to autorenaming Picard can also auto organize into folders. So any time I buy new music, I run it through Picard to ensure metadata is correct, grab lyrics, and put it in the right folder that is then picked up by my self hosted navidrome

      • DarkSirrush@lemmy.ca
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        12 hours ago

        Picard is literally the only Jellyfin related tool I use that isn’t fully automated, because somehow the automated versions I could find were doing things like renaming files on a 60% confidence of the filename and I had to nuke and re download my library.

        So instead I open Picard, click 6 whole buttons, and my entire library/new files are renamed, tagged, and sorted 100% accurately.

    • Quazatron@lemmy.world
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      13 hours ago

      I use Jellyfin also.

      My workflow is like this: buy CDs from Discogs, rip them to FLAC, adjust filenames, covers and metadata with Picard, push the files to Jellyfin that promptly detects the new files.

      I also use Soundconverter in Linux to generate MP3s files for devices that don’t support FLAC.

      I’m very happy with this setup and my collection has never been so organized.