In my music folder I have 250 MP3 files. The problem I have is that I often use different laptops each time I go out DJ'ing. I copy the folder using my network but then to make Atomix find the BPM of each track I have to load them into the deck individually. Is there a way to make Atomix automatically catalog the BPM of all your tracks in one go?
Thanks
Thanks
Posted Fri 21 Dec 01 @ 6:07 pm
I'm not shure, but maybe you could try to copy the AtomixMP3 internal database file you can find in the root-installation folder of Atomix.
If this doesn't works, please don't blame me because it's just an idea, I can't test it.
Greetz, ikke
If this doesn't works, please don't blame me because it's just an idea, I can't test it.
Greetz, ikke
Posted Fri 21 Dec 01 @ 6:26 pm
Thanks, that works
Posted Fri 21 Dec 01 @ 8:44 pm
If you want Atomix to find all your mp3 files and determine the BPM of them without having to play them first, then do the following:
Click on the 'search' button, the one next to the playlist button.
Click on 'scan hard drive' button and when the box opens up, choose 'perform an extended analysis on each file' and then search. The extended analysis takes a while, but it will find the BPM of every mp3 file it finds, which is very useful.
Click on the 'search' button, the one next to the playlist button.
Click on 'scan hard drive' button and when the box opens up, choose 'perform an extended analysis on each file' and then search. The extended analysis takes a while, but it will find the BPM of every mp3 file it finds, which is very useful.
Posted Fri 21 Dec 01 @ 11:57 pm