by threehills » Sun Aug 09, 2009 3:45 pm
Personally, this has happened to me a few times in the past with other programs. My work around for this is to use one of the tag fields as an alternative way of storing the rating. For example, I use the "comments" field and assign it the number 5 for 5 stars etc. To save time, I do this every 50 ratings or so, sort by star rating, select all the ones that need to be updated then update the en mass the comment field with the correct rating.
While the databases that house the "stars" get erased/corrupted from time to time, the mp3 tags themselves do not. So when this happens, I just reverse the above process, sort by comment, and then add starts by selecting all the files with the same comment "rating". I can usually recover all my ratings in this way in less than a minute.
Hope that makes senses.
Personally, this has happened to me a few times in the past with other programs. My work around for this is to use one of the tag fields as an alternative way of storing the rating. For example, I use the "comments" field and assign it the number 5 for 5 stars etc. To save time, I do this every 50 ratings or so, sort by star rating, select all the ones that need to be updated then update the en mass the comment field with the correct rating.
While the databases that house the "stars" get erased/corrupted from time to time, the mp3 tags themselves do not. So when this happens, I just reverse the above process, sort by comment, and then add starts by selecting all the files with the same comment "rating". I can usually recover all my ratings in this way in less than a minute.
Hope that makes senses.