Hey Jerry.

I'm not familiar with the programme you used to rip these files, but most
ripping software will let you choose both how the filenames are structured,
and what sort of metadata is contained within these files. The way I
formerly had my filenames structured, what you described would also happen.
I had the filenames like this:
Artist name - track number (without preceding 0s) - track name.

This makes for easy reading but doesn't always work well with players. Since
my girlfriend's car stereo has a port for a uSb drive, I've now changed the
format to the way most people do theirs. iE, the first track on an album is
just named "01 - trackname.mp3" or somesuch. I'm not even sure the stereo
reads the metadata at all; it seems to work by filename. Anyway, just see
how your ripper is set up and work from there. There should be documentation
explaining how to alter the format.



-----Original Message-----
From: JAWS-Users-List [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of [email protected]
Sent: Tuesday, August 1, 2017 1:12 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [JAWS-Users] Interesting Issue

Morning all.

I have an interesting question. I just finished copying some audio files
from several CDs onto my external hard drive for personal use. When I opened
the location for these files, they are not in numeric order i.e. 1, 2, 3,
etc. They are 1, 10, 11, 2, 3, etc. I used MP3 Ripper from the downloads
aspect of the JAWS-Users site. Can anyone explain this, and a possible
correction? I am using JAWS 17, Windows 10 on a Dell laptop. Many thanks in
advance.
Jerry
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