On my MacBook, with a smaller library, it did find a few dozen such tracks.Īnd the Missing Artwork feature displays a lot of tracks with artwork, and, when I tried downloading artwork, did nothing. Since I have music in other folders-a second iTunes library, and some archived music files-Tune Sweeper was looking at everything, instead of just the files that somehow got deleted from my library. It presumably scans the entire drive, rather than just the iTunes Media folder. The Not in iTunes feature scans your drive for music files that aren’t in your iTunes library. After I downloaded all the track information, most tracks came back with ?. It said that my library had more than 10,000 tracks with incorrect information. This suggests that Tune Sweeper flagged these tracks as having incorrect tags, but was then unable to figure out what was wrong. And then, in some cases, I only see a ? next to a track. There’s no way to know what needs to be fixed until you download the information. The Fix Track Info feature is questionable. Tune Sweeper’s Duplicates feature returns a long report, which requires a lot of work to navigate. Tune Sweeper’s interface for culling duplicates is a bit confusing, and makes the process of culling duplicate tracks arduous. Compare that to Doug Adam’s $15ĭupin, which takes about 7 seconds to display a similar report. For example, when scanning for duplicates, it took 27 minutes for Tune Sweeper to give me a report. This performance issue recurs when testing all of the app’s features. Tune Sweeper’s main interface gives you one-click access to its many features.
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