TurboMinivan
Still plays with cars
- Location
- Lehi, UT
I have aftermarket stereos in both the Jeep and the Suburban, both with USB input ports. Rather than buy iPods or the like, I instead use a pair of 16gig memory sticks (one for each vehicle) with my mp3 collection. IIRC, they are formatted to FAT16 (though it might be NTFS). In general, this works great.
As you might expect, I divide the music into folders. There is a folder for each artist, and then a subfolder for each album by that artist. When I initially transferred some data to the sticks, I simply plugged them into my Windows machine and did the old drag-n-drop routine. Windows always arranges my hard drive folders alphabetically (at least on screen), and it copies them in the same alphabetical order. My car stereos always seemed to read these folders in alphabetical order, which makes it easy when I skip around to find specific music. Fabulous. For the sake of clarification, here is a very small example of how the root directory might have looked with only ten artists present:
Aerosmith
Anthrax
Children of Bodom
Def Leppard
Halford
Judas Priest
Ministry
Ozzy Osbourne
Running Wild
Warlock
My sticks were only about half full, so (eventually) I ripped a large number of additional albums and decided to add those to the collections. I plugged each one back into my Windows machine and again did a drag-n-drop to add them to the sticks. After this new transfer was complete, I viewed them in Windows and saw that everything is peachy.
Now when I plug them into the stereos, there is a problem: everything is not alphabetical. As far as I can tell, the memory sticks number each folder as it is created (and I presume that's just how the file system works). I don't see this number, of course, because both Windows and the stereos instead display the name I have assigned to each folder. Unlike Windows, the stereos don't re-alphabetize everything but instead show the folders in this hidden numerical order... which puts them out of order alphabetically. Furthering my example for clarification, this is now how the root directory appears after I added five more artists to it:
Aerosmith
Anthrax
Children of Bodom
Def Leppard
Halford
Judas Priest
Ministry
Ozzy Osbourne
Running Wild
Warlock
Accept
Blind Guardian
Dio
Gamma Ray
Therion
Now when I go to find any particular folder, I may have to search all over the place since I don't recall if it is in the 'first' alphabetical section or the 'second' one. This is bothersome, especially when I should be paying attention to the road. I understand why the sticks number the folders in this manner--this is the order they were written. It would be really nice if I could just tell Windows to re-assign the folders in numerical order... but I don't know how to do that.
Okay, that's not true. I do know one way to fix it: delete everything off each memory stick, then start from scratch and copy them all again from the hard drive. There's got to be an easier, faster way. It seems like such a simple thing, so I figure there must be a way that I just don't know about.
Any ideas?
As you might expect, I divide the music into folders. There is a folder for each artist, and then a subfolder for each album by that artist. When I initially transferred some data to the sticks, I simply plugged them into my Windows machine and did the old drag-n-drop routine. Windows always arranges my hard drive folders alphabetically (at least on screen), and it copies them in the same alphabetical order. My car stereos always seemed to read these folders in alphabetical order, which makes it easy when I skip around to find specific music. Fabulous. For the sake of clarification, here is a very small example of how the root directory might have looked with only ten artists present:
Aerosmith
Anthrax
Children of Bodom
Def Leppard
Halford
Judas Priest
Ministry
Ozzy Osbourne
Running Wild
Warlock
My sticks were only about half full, so (eventually) I ripped a large number of additional albums and decided to add those to the collections. I plugged each one back into my Windows machine and again did a drag-n-drop to add them to the sticks. After this new transfer was complete, I viewed them in Windows and saw that everything is peachy.
Now when I plug them into the stereos, there is a problem: everything is not alphabetical. As far as I can tell, the memory sticks number each folder as it is created (and I presume that's just how the file system works). I don't see this number, of course, because both Windows and the stereos instead display the name I have assigned to each folder. Unlike Windows, the stereos don't re-alphabetize everything but instead show the folders in this hidden numerical order... which puts them out of order alphabetically. Furthering my example for clarification, this is now how the root directory appears after I added five more artists to it:
Aerosmith
Anthrax
Children of Bodom
Def Leppard
Halford
Judas Priest
Ministry
Ozzy Osbourne
Running Wild
Warlock
Accept
Blind Guardian
Dio
Gamma Ray
Therion
Now when I go to find any particular folder, I may have to search all over the place since I don't recall if it is in the 'first' alphabetical section or the 'second' one. This is bothersome, especially when I should be paying attention to the road. I understand why the sticks number the folders in this manner--this is the order they were written. It would be really nice if I could just tell Windows to re-assign the folders in numerical order... but I don't know how to do that.
Okay, that's not true. I do know one way to fix it: delete everything off each memory stick, then start from scratch and copy them all again from the hard drive. There's got to be an easier, faster way. It seems like such a simple thing, so I figure there must be a way that I just don't know about.
Any ideas?