Screenshots
Description
From the makers of Mixed in Key, MetaBliss is a batch processing tag editor currently only for the Mac (a PC version is promised) that brings at least some of the features of much-loved PC staples like Mp3Tag to OSX. Adding metadata for films/TV shows in iTunes. Any program that can tag MP4s should work fine. Select a video, hit ctrl+I then edit the data. Edit Article How to Add Explicit or Clean Tags in iTunes with Mp3tag (Windows) If you have songs that you bought from iTunes, you may have little boxes next to the song names that say 'EXPLICIT' or 'CLEAN.'
Tag Editor Free is handy spreadsheet for tagging and renaming of audio files. Organize your music in easy and clear way:
• Load tags from files and folders names
• Edit, copy, paste, find and replace tags
• Clean up tags of useless characters, spaces and wrong encoding
• Rename files automatically
All these actions can be done in one window, using keyboard shortcuts, and with full control over your changes.
“A no muss, no fuss OS X application for audio file tagging” - Softpedia
Tag Editor Free supports ID3 tags for MP3, WAV, AIFF, FLAC, and MP4 tags for MP4 and M4A (Apple lossless) files. You can edit Album, Album Artist, Artist, Artwork, Audio Codec, Audio Format, Bit Rate (kbps), BMP (Tempo), Channels, Comment, Composer, Copyright, Disc Number, Encoded By, Genre, Grouping, Key, Title, Track Number and Year tags.
Technical information, such as Duration, Extension, File Name, Folder, Path, Sample Rate (Hz), Size, Tag Format and others can be displayed and used for creation of tags.
PASS TEDIOUS WORK TO THE APP
Tag Editor Free can in automatic mode:
• Create tags from filenames and paths
• Rename files
• Load artworks from local folders
• Clean tags of extra spaces and characters
• Fix case to unify tags
MANAGE TAGS IN MANUAL MODE
Select cells with tags, and apply an action to all of them at once:
• Edit, clear, copy, paste
• Find, replace
• Set artworks - drop image from browser, Finder or just paste it
• Rename files by typing
• Fix encoding by choosing suitable one from the list
EASY AND QUICK TAGGING
To increase workflow’s effectiveness and speed:
• Manage the app by keyboard shortcuts – to speed up tagging and renaming
• Switch to full-screen mode – to maximize effectiveness of the desktop space usage
• Sort, Filter and change columns’ appearance - to focus on relevant content only
• Select single cell, multiple cells, columns, rows or entire sheet - to apply an action
• Listen songs within the editor - to check if tags are relevant
• Revert and Save - to control changes
ORGANISE LARGER MUSIC COLLECTIONS WITH RAPID TAGGING
Tag Editor Free is free to download and use. However, it has limitations for a number of downloadable from network tags and for batch changes. Rapid Tagging unlocks these limitations and provides even more productivity for quick tagging and renaming large audio collections:
• Download tags from network – even if your music do not have any tags
• Speed up your workflow – process and save hundreds of files at once.
Rapid Tagging subscription is available monthly for $5.99 or yearly for $14.99.
“… your music collection will become a highly organized and easily searchable one” – mac.informer
Price may vary by location. Subscriptions will be charged to your credit card through your iTunes account. Your subscription will automatically renew unless canceled at least 24 hours before the end of the current period. You will not be able to cancel the subscription once activated. Manage your subscriptions in Account Settings after purchase.
TECHNICAL SUPPORT
Please, email to sup.amvidia@gmail.com about feature requests or any problems. We always glad to improve our applications for your needs. If you like “Tag Editor Free”, a review on the App Store would be very appreciated.
What’s New
• improvements for loading tags from MusicBrainz
• improvements and bug fixes for renaming
• various bug and stability fixes
Does everything you need it to
This is a great editor especially given that it is free! It does exactly what you need it to. That said, if I had to be picky, the layout could do with some adjustment in my opinion. A layout which enables you to see all the fields you are editing for a given MP3 would be helpful along with being able to see the artwork to ensure the right one is in there.
The quick look feature is helpful which opens a popup with the details of the MP3 and starts playing it until you close. Likewise the ability to edit a field for multiple files at once is good but can feel a little clunky.
Overall a great piece of software which I use regularly.
Can’t call this free and subscriptions are a terrible model
If you’re going to offer something for free, then do just that - offer a trimmed down version of your full product and say you get more features on the full version. Bombarding people with messages to subscribe after editing a few songs is bad practice and highly annoying. It genuinely put me off buying your full product. But more importantly, subscription models are off-putting these days in todays subscription-everything approach to selling. Most people aren’t up for yet another subscription in their life, we already have loads with things like bills, mortgages, support packages, council tax etc., I’d recommend you offer a purchase path for your full product and then say that updates after a year or two can be paid for, at least people feel like they ‘own’ something then.
Good app but needs improvement
This does look like a good app. If you look at the screen shot above, you can see the artwork is squashed, making it hard to see. This is annoying. Also when you do the iniatial scan, it gets the first bit of artwork it can find for a track, so on an album like Abba Greatest Hits, every track has a different bit of artwork. The artwork should be consistent for the whole album. Maybe it it finds multiple artwork, then it should ask which to pick for the album. Generally pretty good.
Information
OS X 10.7 or later, 64-bit processor
Free Mp3 Tag Editor Mac
Family Sharing
Up to six family members will be able to use this app with Family Sharing enabled.
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Picked by Techconnect's Editors
Jendrik Bertram iFlicks 1.4
There are plenty of apps that can transcode video from one format to another, and there are a number of nifty apps that let you tag media files with useful metadata. But Jendrik Bertram’s $20 iFlicks (Mac App Store link) does both, and I’ve found none better at combining the two tasks. iFlicks does its job with a clean, responsive, and very Mac-like interface that makes working with the software intuitive and fun.
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Like the free Video Monkey, iFlicks can help you tag movies or TV shows you’ve ripped from your DVDs, recorded with an EyeTV-powered device, or downloaded from elsewhere—it supports adding artwork, genre, description, release date, episode titles and numbers, and more. It can also convert videos to smaller versions to save bits and bytes on space-crunched iOS devices, or to take files that iTunes can’t understand and make them playable on your Apple TV, to name just a couple examples. (As with other similar apps, iFlicks can convert only media files that aren’t protected with digital-rights-management [DRM] technology, which means it can't convert video purchased from the iTunes Store.)
Choosing your options
iFlicks’s Preset pop-up menu, where you choose the output format for files you plan to process using the utility, offers nine options: Reference File, iTunes Compatible, Universal, iPod, iPhone, Apple TV, iPad, Apple TV 2, and New Apple TV & iPad. Most of the options are pretty self-explanatory, but it’s worth noting that the confusingly named iTunes Compatible option is what you use to add metadata without re-encoding. (It’s also worth noting that the iPhone preset maxes out at 480 by 360, so if you have an iPhone 4, 4S, or 5 or a recent iPod touch, you’ll want to choose the Apple TV preset, which provides a higher-quality video that still works with the latest iPhone models.) You can set any preset as the default.
The Destination pop-up menu lets you choose where you want iFlicks to save the resulting file: To your Movies folder, an iFlicks Folder inside the Movies folder, the same location as the original, or another location of your choosing.
Click the Add To iTunes button (toggling the button to the “down” position) and iFlicks will copy the final file into iTunes (this option disables the Destination pop-up menu). Where, exactly, in iTunes? iFlicks’s preferences window lets you choose between the main iTunes library, a specific playlist, or an option called Add Videos To Playlists In The iFlicks Folder. With this option chosen, iFlicks creates a playlist folder in iTunes and populates that folder with two playlists: Movies and TV Shows. The utility then automatically places processed videos into the appropriate playlist in that folder.
A similar toggle button, Move Original to Trash, gives you the option to move the original file to the Trash when iFlicks finishes encoding/tagging it. That’s handy, and it’s also better than deleting the file outright just in case the resulting file is unplayable. (Some users have reported that some files won’t play after encoding/tagging—the even app warns you to back up your media files before using the app.) I’ve been using the app for several years now, and I’ve noticed such problems only on very rare occasion—and not at all with recent versions of the software—but it’s still better to be safe.
You can, of course, change these settings for each video you process, but if you tend to use the same settings every time, it’s easier to just configure everything at the start and then get to work.
Photo crop editor for mac. Affinity Photo supports unlimited layers, groups, layer adjustments, filters, masking, and more: you also have access to tools like dodge, red-eye fix, burn, blemish, clone, and patch (so pretty much Photoshop without all the convoluted bells and whistles). If you're looking for a photo editing app that goes above and beyond for the pricetag, while still allowing you complete creative control over your images, then it might be worth it to take a peek at Affinity Photo. • • • • • • • Affinity Photo.
Simple processing
When you drag a file or group of files into the iFlicks window, the software searches the TheTVDB.com and themoviedb.org online databases for matches with each file’s name—including, for TV shows, the season and episode numbers if part of the file name.
Mp3 Id3 Tag Editor Mac
If you don’t see the correct info for your file(s), you can click the Search For Details button at the bottom of the window (it looks like the non-standard OS X search button). In the window that appears, you can enter a new name to search—as you type, the app suggests titles that it thinks might match. You can toggle between TV Show and Movie results, and you can choose from among 23 different search languages.
When you find a match, click OK. You can then customize any of the fields to suit your needs before writing the metadata to your file. You can improve auto-detection by properly naming your media files (for example, futuramaS07E15
) before dropping them into iFlicks.
If a file is already encoded in the proper format for your destination device, choosing the iTunes Compatible preset and clicking the Start button instantly writes the metadata to your files. Similarly, if you have iTunes-compatible files in an MKV container (such as HD video ripped from a Blu-ray movie that you own), iFlicks can handle tagging and prepping the video for iTunes using that same preset, though the process takes a little longer because iFlicks has to mux (join together) video and audio streams. (It still takes much less time than actually transcoding video.) Yamaha offline editor for mac 5d.
Alternatively, iFlicks can transcode video from one format to another. A common use of this feature is creating a file with a smaller frame size and bit rate—and, thus, a smaller file size—for portable devices. Thanks to the included open-source libavcodec, iFlicks is also useful for converting non-iTunes-compatible video files to something you can sync and watch on your iPad or Apple TV.
Getting advanced
Although iFlicks offers lots of options for manually tweaking files, clicking the Rules button lets you configure some cool scripting features for automating such tweaks. For example, I have iFlicks set up so that if the show name (in the file name) contains Daily Show, iFlicks sets the show tag to The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, as that’s how the show is named in the TheTVDB.com database. Similarly, you could tell iFlicks to automatically set the artwork for a certain show or genre.
The app includes a dozen pre-built scripts that are either complete (for example, setting the HD tag based on the file’s resolution) or half ready to go (identifying movie files of a particular genre, for example, with the outcome portion left blank for you to fill in).
It takes a little trial and error to get used to the app’s language—for example, name, show and filename are different input options whose differences may not be obvious—but when you figure it out these rules can automate some of the drudgery involved in tagging media files.
Bottom line
If you do a lot of video-file tagging and conversion, you’ll be hard-pressed to find another Mac app that performs these tasks as gracefully and as well as iFlicks. If you balk at the $20 price tag and need to tag files only occasionally, you can probably get by with Video Monkey, but with iFlicks you get what you pay for—a more capable and complete app.
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Mp3 Tag Editor Mac
Jendrik Bertram iFlicks 1.4
iFlicks elegantly tags your TV shows and movies with online metadata, and can also convert video files to play in iTunes and sync with your iOS devices.