Watch out for these things. If your dupe-remover works on filenames,
then it can do what you want. Some, however, work on checksums, a much
more reliable way of detecting duplicates because it uses the actual
contents of the file to determine duplicity, not just a filename. The
good side about using filenames is that the program will give you a
list and let you manually choose which file to keep for every dupe
found.

On Fri, 27 Jul 2012 15:14:25 -0400, you wrote:

>try No Dupe which can be found at:
>
>http://otissoft.co.uk
>
>The way I use it is to go into Windows Explorer  to the folder I want to 
>search. Then I hit the applications key and move to search with No Dupe and 
>hit enter. After it searches the program will come up and there is a tab for 
>results you can go through.
>
>One thing I don't get is that every time it starts up it checks to see if 
>there is an update. And even if there is no update it brings up a window 
>telling you which version you are using and which version is available. 
>There are buttons yes and no to enter on to download or not. so be careful. 
>just because that window comes up it doesn't mean there is a new version to 
>download.
>
>Dean
>
>
>-----Original Message----- 
>From: Hank Smith
>Sent: Thursday, July 26, 2012 11:22 PM
>To: PC Audio Discussion List
>Subject: blind friendly duplicate audio file remover?
>
>Hello is there a blind friendly program that can search my music folders
>and remove any duplicate mp3s and audio files, and keep the higher
>quality copies?
>trying to clean up my music and audio folder
>Hank
>
>
>To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
>[email protected] 
>
>
>To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
>[email protected]

To unsubscribe from this list, send a blank email to:
[email protected]

Reply via email to