![]() ![]() So it’s pretty awesome, I’m just not sure if it’s $40 worth of awesome. The real upside was that there was no transcoding required, everything just copied across to iTunes and is working beautifully on the iPhone, so the time I save in transcoding is way way way more than the time it takes me to clean up the file names. When I got the Apple TV 4 and seen how beautiful (yet simple) the UI was, I starting thinking I wished I had kept all my movies and tv shows properly labeled but that was simply to much work to do manually. It appears to be a common problem that these meta data adding tools have, they all want to use the DVD cover artwork, which looks pretty in iTunes but doesn’t display at all on the iPhone which seems to demand a square image I tended to keep a tidy iTunes music library, but when it came to movies or tv shows, I would just slap a artwork on it and forget about it. When it comes to artwork I did have to manually replace everything, even if it did find artwork. iFlicks is the best and most complete video and metadata handling solution available for macOS. The Mac Studio delivered worse framerates in Civ 6 than the 16-inch MacBook Pro 2021 (M1 Max w/ 10-core CPU, 32-core GPU, 64GB RAM) we tested last year despite it having half the RAM and an older. Those that failed to get details seemed to use the full file name as the title, which I had to correct manually. Some got the episode screen date and description. It was a bit strange really, I was pulling through Blackadder and some episodes were getting artwork, all seemed to get the correct show name, series number and episode number (although that could be down to my very neat file labelling?). IFlicks took a bit of manual tinkering to clean up the files. I’ll have to have a look at that one too. ![]()
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