Dell 30 manual Implementation Overview, Source material, Organization

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Using a Dell DJ MP3 player for field playback of bird songs.

Rev A2, November, 2005

IMPLEMENTATION OVERVIEW

For me, as a guide, it’s imperative that I can access the song or call of a specific species as quickly as possible before an opportunity passes by. No point in having tons of material on the MP3 player if I can’t get to what I want quickly when the need arises.

With this in mind, I set about designing and implementing a scheme that would meet my needs. I invested many hours over a period of two months from the time that I received the MP3 player in early March 2005 until I started using it full time in the field in May 2005.

Source material

At the start of this project I only owned the Peterson Eastern and Western Bird Song CDs. I decided that I needed something easier to work with (i.e. one species per track) and selected the following Cornell CDs as my master source:

Bird songs of California; Geoffrey A. Keller (3 discs)

Bird songs of the Rocky Mountain States and Provinces; Robert Righter and Geoffrey A. Keller (3 discs) Bird songs of Southeastern Arizona and Sonora, Mexico; Geoffrey A. Keller (2 discs)

Bird songs of the Lower Rio Grande Valley and Southwestern Texas; Geoffrey A. Keller (1 disc) A complete index of all 9 discs is available as a separate document (see appendix).

There are only a few tracks that have multiple (two) species per track. Generally speaking, I’m happy with the overall quality of the source material for my purposes. However, there are a fair number of tracks with problems. In some cases, not enough care has been taken in terms of eliminating background noise. Even worse, sometimes the vocalization of another species that is supposedly “in the background” is almost as loud as the intended species.

Organization

Musicmatch is primarily designed to manage music tracks using “tags” that allow easy organization and selection of tracks for computer playback and transfer to a portable device. Unlike previous versions of Musicmatch, the current version (I’m using version 10) does not support multiple libraries. This is definitely annoying since I wanted to define three libraries.

Why three libraries? The master list of CD tracks is sacrosanct. This is my “Raw Birds” library and does not get modified nor copied to the MP3 player, it’s used only as a source. The edited versions of the tracks that are converted to MP3 format belong to my “Birds” library. I also have a “Music” library. The tracks in the latter two libraries are copied to the DJ 30.

As it turns out, I was able to achieve the same functionality using the “Genre” tag so it was only a little inconvenient. Thus, I was able to create “pseudo libraries” whose contents can be selected and manipulated independently of each other.

This partial screenshot shows how the “libraries” appear. In this example, “Raw Birds” is expanded and sorted alphabetically.

© Copyright Stuart Healy

www.aztrogon.com

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Contents Using a Dell DJ MP3 player For field playback of bird songs Table of Contents Compromises Introduction Original Requirements DecisionHardware Dell DJ Explorer SoftwareMusicmatch Jukebox Audio EditingImplementation Overview Source materialOrganization Page Looking at the results Getting to a bird Software Workflow Copy the source material to diskPage Add source tracks to Raw Birds Library Page Page Page Edit audio tracks Page Convert edited tracks to MP3 format Add MP3 files to Birds Library Copy Birds Library to Dell DJPage DJ Settings Practical MattersDJ Operation Problems and Annoyances DJ playerDesired Features Ongoing ConcernsAppendix