Winamp older version1/14/2024 Never ever experiment with partitioning or imaging on disks that contain unique data!) Having a secondary systemband multiple DDs, you really have no reason not to experiment with this, I'd say! (Of course, I could be totally wrong. Also familiarize yourself thoroughly with their respective sizes.) It's good practice to give each partition a name/label, so you can recognize them. (The drive letter - C/D - can be different and probably WILL be different inside the environment in which you'd conduct the imaging ops. Both take a considerable learning curve, but have proven extremely reliable across my machine park. I have used older versions of both Symantec/Norton Ghost and Acronis for this purpose. This will greatly increase payload (size) and redundancy, but it might yield even higher continuity for your purpose. In your case, though, it could be a tactic to actually include the music in such an image. IMO, for system images, it is very handy to have separate system ("C") and data ("D") partitions, and keep all data (audio, video, photos, documents) on the "D" partition. (Just take out the other laptop, or put in a reserve DD.) This ensures continued operation within a few minutes of a disk SNAFUBAR. If you have identical systems, it becomes fully viable to make a partition image of your primary machine's operating system, and 'transplant' it unto the secondary unit (and/or the backup DDs). However, it describes a sure way to 'copy' your whole system (incl. The below strategy does not (yet) address the question how to add more/new music with tablature. If I assume correctly, you do have one working setup, but want to build a safety net? I'm not sure if this is (part of) what you meant? Hope it helps. I make extensive use of that.īe sure to make backups of both prog and AppData folders, AND extensively experiment with all this first on another machine, before you change anything in your primary version! There are some quircks, you could lose your old settings and/or have a hard time restoring backups.īut! It might be easier just installing wAmp on the secondary machine and copy only the AppData and plugins. You must then also copy the AppData folder - unless you remove/rename "paths.ini" (which will make wAmp start saving the settings in its program folder the original AppData setts can subsequently be dumped over the new/raw/empty setts in the prog folder). Still, I'll share my knowledge.īoth of those versions (and most others) can be, more or less, made portable (i.e., transferable to another machine via simple zip/USB/copy). (E.g., not streaming, nor advanced playlist or med lib functions.)Īlso, views and plugins are relatively unused by me. I am very familiar with 5v52 and 5v57 (which are undoubtedly quite similar to the intermediary 5v56) - but only in some limited, basic areas. (I'm doing this from memory ask if sth is unclear.) (Make sure there's lots of metal and soundtrack scores in it! For your own good). The tiny "manage playlist" lets you save playlists.Īdding music to the Med Lib goes through: menu, preferences, media library look for the tab 'local media', and add the folders that contain the desired music. You can simply drag'n'drop music and playlist files into the main playlist editing it works with right-click, and with the keys delete, shift, ctrl, and the arrows. With 'scanned', do you mean 'added to the Media Library'? (Or does it bring up graphics of your scanned tablature / musical notes?)
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