![]() ![]() So I have been tooling around with Musichi based on a mention by Jens. Well, has been nearly a year since my last response to this thread - wife & I have completely transitioned over to Apple computers since last spring, but I've still found no good solution to get my LARGE musical DBs off Access - still have my old PC in a back bedroom and can update Access there (but really silly to save an unwanted computer for that purpose) - I've been on many websites/forums and left a number of posts - there is just NOT an easy solution to this Access transition except to run Windows/Office on an Apple Mac (which requires using Boot Camp or a partition program such as Parallels) - I need to decide and will probably just export to Excel and bring into Numbers on my Macs - won't give me the beautiful printing forms that I've loved on Access, but still have not found a good solution! Dave Quote from: Baroque Obama on February 08, 2014, 01:05:51 PM If you have time you can add links to excel to launch your tracks with your favorite media player The best(easy and user-friendly) collection databases are MS Access and MS Excel. Both let you to select a media player of your choosing to play. CATraxx is much much better from any tool but it's quite technical and it's defunct. ![]() The best collection management and editing software is Collectorz Music Collector. ![]() The best media players with collection management and customizable user interfaces are Mediamonkey and JRiver Media Center. The expectations and needs for classical music collection management are, of course, subjective but as far as I'm concerned: I have been probing this for a while now. Here is a view I use for classical music: It allows me to use whatever tags I choose and to build custom views for browsing my collection. It has secure tagging, powerful tag editing capabilities and a very configurable music player. I looked at a number of software programs and found JRiver Media Center to be the best fit by far. Someone asked if there was anything better for cataloging a collection of classical music files. Quote from: Old Listener on February 08, 2014, 11:40:34 AM ![]()
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