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Anyone Use MoodLogic?

Its a file manager system...Can it be used instead of iTunes is my question?
It's so smart how it renames everything automatically without me having to do anything manually. :D
D
[202 byte] By [defiant] at [2007-11-9 15:34:01]
# 1 Re: Anyone Use MoodLogic?
Whats a moodlogic? Is it some MP3 tagger kind of thing? Sorry, I just woke up :P
Adam at 2007-11-15 17:19:42 >
# 2 Re: Anyone Use MoodLogic?
Yeah spot on mate. See:

www.moodlogic.com

D
defiant at 2007-11-15 17:20:42 >
# 3 Re: Anyone Use MoodLogic?
We did have a Moodlogic board but it had a grand total of two posts in it, so it was deleted.
Thread here ( http://www.ipodlounge.com/forums/showthread.php?s=&threadid=362&highlight=Moodlogic) discusses it a bit.
Bob at 2007-11-15 17:21:41 >
# 4 Re: Anyone Use MoodLogic?
Joe Masters (the creator of ephpod) worked on the iPod plugin.

It's basically a media organizer/player/playlist creator. The catch is that based on their database of analyzed tunes you get your songs tagged automatically with "moods" (and other such things). My only problem with that is I prefer to tag my tunes myself. Think I know what I consider my music to be better than someone else.

Also, file naming is limited.

Ya know?

Adam
ashawley at 2007-11-15 17:22:46 >
# 5 Re: Anyone Use MoodLogic?
I have been using moodlogic for about a year now and it works well for creating and syncing mood and genre based playlists to your ipod. It is easy to use, syncs quickly, and as with all the other music managers you can choose not to let it label your music at all. I use MMJB to supertag, MC9 or ephpod to sync, and moodlogic to create moodlists. Once your library its activated (broadband strongly recommended!) it basically lets you create true mood/genre-based playlists of your music using a database developed from information moodlogic users have plugged into the moodlogic song profiling software. Once several people have profiled the same song similarly the profiles for that song are kind of averaged and anyone who has that song in their files will have it automatically profiled (called activation) when moodlogic sends out a profiling update (very infrequently). This does not affect the tag unless you choose for it to. Since the song activation database depends on what users are profiling from their own libraries, the extent your library is similar to theirs may vary wildly. It recognizes some very mainstream music but not nearly all. It recognized a surprising amount of my offbeat music but not all. Songs are not available for automatic moodmixing unless they have been activated. Of about 1300 songs I have about 75% now available for moodmixing after about a year of updates. You can create a moodmix for play or to sync to the ipod in seconds at the touch of a button. You can always create a mood based automix and add songs into it if it need to. Or make your own mix manually. All in all, I do like moodlogic...but it is hard to recommend at $40 unless you have a HUGE music library so you get mood mixes containing a decent number of songs. It is definitely not an all in one program...but then again neither are any of the others. Thats how I ended up with MMJB, ephpod, MC9, AudibleManager, AND MoodLogic all in use one way or another. Now I am considering adding iTunes to the list so I can purchase some music. Oh well, at least it is free.
bordeaaj at 2007-11-15 17:23:46 >
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