One of the more useful apps in Android is Airdroid. Copy a whole music
folder across by WiFi with the cool web interface.
On Apr 2, 2013 2:55 PM, "Jason White" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Toby Corkindale <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > b) Regardless of whether the shell is superior or not -- it still
> > shouldn't be this hard to have a simple MTP transfer work from a GUI!
> > Having work-arounds for unix hackers isn't a valid excuse for putting
> > MTP functionality into an app and then ignoring bug reports for over
> > three years.
> > I know, I know, I didn't pay anything for the app and can't reasonably
> > expect any minimum level of functionality. It's just frustrating that it
> > seems like there's barely any improvement from year to year.
>
> Then there are all the people who could have submitted a patch but
> didn't...
> so it seems that nobody cares enough to fix the bug. Maybe they're using
> something else instead.
>
> I always manage my audio files from the shell and I'll probably continue
> to do
> so. A friend once searched hard for a good music organizing tool under
> Linux
> but found nothing suitable. Suppose you have a collection of symphonies,
> string quartets, piano sonatas etc. Each track is a separate file, but
> three
> or four tracks, typically, constitute the entire work. Or consider an
> opera -
> divided into acts, scenes etc., and you need to be able to select those.
> The
> problem is that (as of a few years ago, at least, and according to someone
> who
> searched) there's no tool that will recognize the appropriate hierarchical
> levels in a music collection. That's a rather fundamental design flaw.
>
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