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OMG 2923 of MP3 lost Track Number
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By +pmrd · Posted
Very fitting name since AI users have air where there brains should be. -
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By Rosyna · Posted
Yes, it was amusing at the time because even then dbrand was well known for stealing the designs of products from other companies. That’s what they do. -
By ZipZapRap · Posted
Didn’t Dbrand once complain that Casetify was ripping off their designs a well? seems pretty bad of them to try and get around Valve’s copyright this way with that in mind. -
By David Uzondu · Posted
Dbrand thought they could get away with this Steam Machine case, Valve disagreed by David Uzondu Image via Dbrand Dbrand has cancelled its highly anticipated Companion Cube enclosure for the Valve Steam Machine, which it teased back in November of last year with a concept render and sign-up page, because it did not ask Valve for permission first before manufacturing the case. According to Dbrand, it took the "backwards approach" of building the product first before asking for permission from the copyright holder. Seven months of work went into the project, requiring over a thousand engineering hours from the design team. Workers developed forty-four sets of injection molding tools, making a unique mold for each sub-component of the crate. When the Companion Cube went live on Monday last week, it, according to Dbrand, quickly became the second-fastest-selling product in the company's fifteen-year history, racking up orders for hundreds of thousands of units. Customers eagerly bought the $129.95 deluxe edition or the bare-bones $99.95 version, which the manufacturer cheekily branded as the "Poverty Cube". It was around this time that the legal eagles at Valve descended on the accessory maker with a formal demand. The developer pointed out that the iconic block design remains protected intellectual property from the game Portal, so unlicensed sales had to stop. Dbrand said that all its pleas to salvage the project with the Valve team, including proposals to run a properly licensed release under official terms "with their blessing", fell on deaf ears, so it had no choice but to obey and remove every trace of the product from the internet. If you bought the enclosure, the company said that banks will process your refund by the end of this week, but if it still hasn't arrived in your account by then, you should not hesitate to contact support. The Steam Machine itself is a high-performance console that Valve designed directly to bring PC gaming into the living room. It was announced on 12th November 2025 (the same day Dbrand announced the Cube) and runs on the Linux-based SteamOS, the same OS that powers the Steam Deck. As for the price, due to the shortage of memory and storage chips, the hardware cost landed much higher than people were expecting, starting at $1,049 for the 512 model (without a controller) or $1,128 with the new gamepad. The premium 2 TB model pushes those prices even higher, selling at $1,349 for the standalone console and hitting $1,428 if you want the bundle.
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Question
McoreD
What a Christmas present....
Hi All,
Hope you all had a nice Christmas.
Here begins my rant...
When opened up iTunes as usual today morning, I realized iTunes couldn't locate bunch of the files. When checked Windows Explorer, I saw many files had got renamed.
For example
from: Sean Paul\Dutty Rock\05 Get Busy.mp3
to: Sean Paul\Dutty Rock\Get Busy.mp3
So I backed up the iTunes Library, recreated a new iTunes Library. I ran a file tag checker and found out 2923 tracks were missing Track Number. The old iTunes Library didn't show me this. So I have permanently lost the Track #. I can't run a program like Tag&Rename because not even the file name has the track #.
Currently I am using MusicBrainz to read tags from CDDB to recover as much possible.
While digging into the problem, I noticed a few things:
None of the M4A songs were affected.
All the files which got track # missing had the Date Modified from 2006-09-28 with time varying from 16:45 to 19:45.
So whatever did this modified the files on 2006-09-28, couldn't do it for M4A files. It also has started doing the damage from A to Z, but couldn't go pass W because I may be rebooted the PC.
It seems like the actual files were not renamed until last night because iTunes would have complained otherwise. The only thing I installed last night was WMP11 but didn't even add any music to its library.
I was wondering if strange things like this has happened to you guys before, and what sort of software programs are known to be causing this kinda behavior.
Thanks,
McoreD
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