My apologies if this is a faq (I have searched).
Like most people, I store my music by album (I do store most classical music by work). Album art can be embedded in each track, but can also be added to the folder using a well known name (dbpoweramp used Folder) that most players will find and utilize. Dbpoweramp makes it easy to do either or both. I play back music using a phone or tablet app, and occasionally on my computer using a web interface specific to my NAS music server.
My question is: are there advantages to embedding the album art in the track, or is it just wasted space? I could only think of 3:
1) You can more easily embed multiple images (but then the player app has to display them).
2) For playlists where the player isn't smart enough to grab the per folder album art from the folder where the track is actually stored.
3) For "mixtapes" where you have copied tracks to a usb stick or the equivalent for playback in a portable player.
For those dbpoweramp users who intentionally embed the artwork in the track metadata, are there other reasons to do so?
Thanks,
Doug
Like most people, I store my music by album (I do store most classical music by work). Album art can be embedded in each track, but can also be added to the folder using a well known name (dbpoweramp used Folder) that most players will find and utilize. Dbpoweramp makes it easy to do either or both. I play back music using a phone or tablet app, and occasionally on my computer using a web interface specific to my NAS music server.
My question is: are there advantages to embedding the album art in the track, or is it just wasted space? I could only think of 3:
1) You can more easily embed multiple images (but then the player app has to display them).
2) For playlists where the player isn't smart enough to grab the per folder album art from the folder where the track is actually stored.
3) For "mixtapes" where you have copied tracks to a usb stick or the equivalent for playback in a portable player.
For those dbpoweramp users who intentionally embed the artwork in the track metadata, are there other reasons to do so?
Thanks,
Doug
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