![]() ![]() It is SO COMMON to want to transfer ALL your Poweramp settings to a new phone or copy your music and playlists to a new SD Card and expect to have it not break everything. My point is (as I think a lot of other users agree) that one has to jump through unnecessary and complicated hoops and/or install (and sometimes pay for) external tools to do what Android and/or Poweramp should do on its own. ![]() I wish there was a better player out there, but there isn't - which is why I paid for Poweramp. that I've accepted losing 90% of my Poweramp data and slowing re-adding them as as inevitable. I'll try these solutions, but I've already lost so much from changing SD Cards, phone re-sets, new phones, etc. Thank you andrewilley and flyingdutchman for your followups. You may find that forum user TheoKlink's "New Playlist Manager" app might help if you have a lot of internal playlists, ratings, etc that you want to retain between devices. Things like ratings and most-played counts will not be transferred, and nor will downloaded album art. The Playlist files can just be copied over (see 1 and 2 above). Poweramp should be able to work this out, but if not you may need to edit the files to reflect the new directory path format (M3U or M3U8 files are just plain text list of paths/filenames, and are really simple to edit if you need to).ģ) If needed, remember to export/backup your PA Settings and any internally-created playlists from your old device and then re-import the settings on the new one. Poweramp should still find it, but it would be worth going in to Settings > Folders and Library > MusicFolders once you have installed PA, and untick any locations that you don't want scanned, and just tick only the music folder located on your SD Card.Ģ) Such a change in directory naming can cause problems with playlists as they could now be referring to files in non-existent folders. Otherwise, copying via a USB cable to a computer and then back onto your new phone (also via USB cable) would be the next easiest option.ġ) The new device may use a different name for its SD Card location. In addition, you have the option to scale down the artworks/covers during synchronization to the dimensions 300x300px, 500x500px, 900x900px, 1200x1200px or 1500x1500px.The simplest way would be to take the SD card out of your old phone and put it in your new one. With iSyncer you have the possibility to convert your music into the formats. This means: With synchronization new songs are added, changed songs (eg change of ID3 tags) are updated and no longer existing songs of an iTunes/Apple Music playlist are deleted. ![]() The synchronization ensures that the current playlist tracks are stored in the target directory. During the synchronization, the filename of a song is generated corresponding to the synchronization format (also called config) from the ID3 tags of a song.įor synchronization, you have only to select the target directory and a profile and start with one click. As well you can select an iTunes/Apple Music playlist and a matching synchronization format (eg Playlist/Artist - Song) and add it to a profile. You can manage your playlists for synchronization with user-defined profiles. Optionally, it's possible to create playlist formats like m3u, m3u8 (UTF-8), pls, wpl or xspf. ISyncer provides a copy of the playlist tracks directly to the desired destination directory (also removable disks). ISyncer will not automatically store your music by artist, album, etc, because you decide the format to store your music. ![]() Use iSyncer to export your iTunes/Apple Music music without any effort. ISyncer is a desktop application for Windows and MacOS. ![]()
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