![]() ![]() ![]() Features: - Get tracklists from: servers, CUE-files, XMCD-files, MP3-files (see MP3 Scanner features), Folder-contents. However, you'll get the best results on Windows XP. Best of all, it's free! It has been successfully tested with Windows 98 and XP, so it should work on ME and 2000 too. I've only heard about one other program that can do something similar, but that's a Linux command-line utility. ![]() It even calculates the FreeDB DiscID, so you can get the tracklist from FreeDB. This program can do it: it reads all MP3-files in a folder you specify, and creates a CUE-sheet with correct tracklengths. Have you ever had this: you've downloaded all tracks from an album separately, and you want to glue them together with some join-tool, but you also want a matching CUE-sheet. You can create a new Cue-sheet from scratch by adding tracks, cut/copy/paste/delete/move tracks and edit the titles. But it has more: you can use it as a full-featured Cue-sheet editor. And it can write the Cue-sheet to an mp3file's ID3v2-tag (like mp3cue does). This program can also export the tracklist to a XML, HTML, CSV or a Text-file. You can use musiCutter (see Links) to split the mp3 file into multiple parts using the Cue-file, or CDRWIN to burn a CD with correct track-markers. You can save the tracklist to a Cue-file or a XMCD-file. If FreeDB doesn't have trackdata for the CD, you can also try the MP3 scanning feature: automatically search through a large MP3 file to find split-points and recreate a new Cue-sheet, or extract the Cue-sheet embedded in an ID3v2-tag. This program allows you to find the CD on and convert it straight into a Cue Sheet that can be used by musiCutter, CDRWIN or mp3cue. More and more download sites and P2P programs offer full CD's in one big MP3 file, but finding the correct tracknames and lengths takes a lot of time. ![]()
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