![]() ![]() That was quickly solved with a trip to the preferences where you are able to control what information must be the same in order for the song to be considered a duplicate. I was shocked to find over 900 duplicates the first time I ran the app and even more shocked to see that it listed the same song from different albums as duplicates. It has different categories of problems it found along the top: Duplicates, Inconsistent, Orphans and Missing. I decided to give Song Sergeant a try and see what it could do. I wanted some control, but also the ability to do a mass clean-up, if I was satisfied with what it found. I didn’t want an app that would just find duplicates and delete them. Obviously, with multiple copies of songs, these stats get really messed up. I don’t know why, I’ve been doing it for a long time and enjoy the stats. I like to keep track of the number of times a song was played, the last time it was played, etc. I start with the movies and videos because those will free up the most.īecause I don’t get very much space by keeping the songs organized, I typically don’t bother with those. ![]() I know there is always some space to free up there. The first place I go whenever my computer starts to get full is the iTunes Library. That’s a problem for a number of reasons, not the least of which is hard drive space. With 7,500 songs, numerous movies, television shows and a lot of concerts, I’ve pretty much given up trying to keep up with duplicate copies of my media. That’s a problem I’ve been looking to fix for some time and I think LairWare’s Song Sergeant may be the answer. I don’t have the biggest iTunes library in the world, but it’s big enough to become unmanageable sometimes. ![]()
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