![]() However, Nightingale updates play count and skip count tags internally, that might cause the file to get accessed by tagging code. I'm not aware of features automatically altering your files. (01-08-2014, 11:31 AM)rsjtdrjgfuzkfg Wrote: (01-08-2014, 04:19 AM)libraryeye Wrote: I don't want Nightingale to automatically alter my files ![]() Has anyone else seen this issue, and perhaps discovered a way around it? So, unfortunately, this means I can't use Nightingale. (What is being modified, and why?)ī) I have an enormous music library and backups of it and do not want to needlessly have to back up every single file I've played when I run my backup software. I don't want Nightingale to automatically alter my files for two reasons -Ī) I've got metadata set as I want and have no idea what, if anything, this program I haven't even tested yet is modifying. I ran uninstall in Software Manager and it's still there, but now it just won't launch) Haven't tested FAT32 or NTFS or anything else, as I primarily installed for Mac & Linux use. Tested MP3 - does not seem to happen! Also, regardless of file type, this does not happen if I play file from local EXT4 Linux drive it only happens when I play from my external HFS+ drives. And Nightingale doesn't just modify file first time it plays it modifies file each and every time it plays. It looks promising, but regardless of how I set preferences, the program changes modification date of each and every OGG or FLAC file I play ( I haven't tested MP3 or AAC) so I have uninstalled. Was going to test out and also run under my Linux installs if it went well. Finally updated my Mac experience from PowerPC to Intel with Snow Leopard and was excited this meant I could run Nightingale. Hello! Thanks for your great work on this project.
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