Pauven wrote: Sun Feb 17, 2019 1:22 pm
All my blu-Ray media is ripped as folder structures which is why I’ve been with TMT5. It was the only player that could play a movie from a folder structure ripped from the disk.
I'm fairly certain all of the players can do this: PowerDVD, DVDFab Player, MPC, VLC.
Teddyboy wrote: Sun Feb 17, 2019 2:30 pm
I’m currently scrubbing the meta-data as I type this. I’m not expecting any issues as I keep it pretty clean and I lock down my titles.
So here's the rub - you and I and pretty much every user here started off with meticulously maintained meta-data. That's awesome, but that's not what I mean by meta-data cleanup. So be prepared, it's unlikely to go as smoothly as you expect.
The problem isn't so much your meta-data, but rather the mymovies.xml meta-data files. Too often these files are several years old (i.e. 2014), from back when Binnerup encrypted them, or even if they are a bit newer they are still old and out of date. Because they haven't been updated in years, they are not in sync with the meta-data inside MMCM. When you start getting mymovies.xml errors in the CMC Sync Error Report, pay attention to the file dates included in the report, as they are often very old.
And Binnerup says this is working as designed... These old, out of date files are still readable by MMCM and are up-to-date enough to work for whatever reasons MMCM needs them.
But since these files are the sole source for meta-data for CMC, they must be current, up-to-date, and not encrypted. So working as designed does not mean compatible with CMC.
That means you have to force MMCM to update the meta-data. But even when you click the option to force update, it doesn't do much of anything. Instead, you have to first delete the existing meta-data files (the Clean option) so that the force update realizes the meta-data file is missing and will actually create the updated files.
Then comes the next shock: Now that you've cleaned and updated your meta-data and sync again, the CMC Sync Error Report starts telling you about a bunch of movies that are missing the mymovies.xml file. Then when you start troubleshooting, you discover that either A) The title is completely missing from your collection and you never realized it, or B) The title/discs have been changed to Offline instead of Online Folder / Online File. That's right, somewhere along the way MMCM messed up your database, and either titles went missing or got reconfigured on you.
Here's the interesting thing: If you weren't going through this process of cleaning up your meta-data and syncing with CMC, you wouldn't even realize that you are missing movies from your collection. After all, when you have 1000+ movies, would you really even notice a few dozen older titles missing? Unless you were actively looking for one of those to play, it's doubtful you would notice.
So CMC is exposing these issues that pretty much every user has and doesn't know it. Over the past 1.5 years, I've supported most of my user base through this cleanup. Maybe you'll get lucky... but I doubt it.
NOTE: If you only have a few that are causing problems, you are better off simply clicking the "Save Meta-data" button on the MMCM toolbar, which forces an immediate write of all meta-data, and you don't have to clean first.
Then the final bit of clean-up comes when you decide you want to use your TV Series in CMC, listing out your episodes for direct play (which works awesomely!). That's when you write me for more help, because the TV Series are either missing or the Episodes aren't showing. That's when I explain that MMCM only exports TV Series meta-data if the title is in your collection as a Disc, and that Episode meta-data is only exported when you map the episodes to the disc and then assign extra dummy files to the Episode's file location. Though I have written several tutorials on just this topic here in the forum, so be sure to read those first.
Some of these headaches go away if I implement the My Movies API - at least all the extra tricks we have to go through to force MMCM to write the meta-data files in the first place. But a lot of this cleanup (re-adding movies that disappeared, correcting titles to online instead of offline, and mapping episodes) you have to do either way, and with the current file-based meta-data approach, CMC identifies and reports on these issues, whereas the API might simply mask these issues.
Sorry, not trying to scare you off. Just wanted to prepare you for the same rollercoaster ride of disappointment, acceptances and finally elation that we all go through as we discover just how poorly MMCM handles these physical meta-data files and DB integrity.
Paul