Download Music To Micro Sd Card


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I recently purchased a micro SD card for my LG G3 with the intention of moving and storing all of my music files on the SD card so that I would have more room on my phone for applications/photos/etc. I moved my music files from the internal memory to the SD card, however, when I tested to see if I could play a music file from the SD card without the file being on the phone's internal memory, the file did not show up on the SD card. I then researched and was told that I needed to have the music folder on my SD card linked to a music player, so I installed the recommended "Poweramp" music player and attempted to link my music folder from the SD card to the Poweramp app. I then tested again by deleting a music file from the internal memory of my phone and attempted to play it in Poweramp, but the music file disappeared again.

Can someone tell me how to CORRECTLY link my SD card music folder with the Poweramp app so that I can play music from the SD card without having the music on the phone's internal memory, which is the primary reason that I purchased the SD card. Thanks!

I have an LG e980 Optimus Pro G and I have found if I have both the LG music player and the Poweramp music player on my phone I have no issues with all of my music being on my SD card whenever I download anything from an outside source it automatically loads to my phone memory I have to physically transfer it to my SD card

In Poweramp Settings > Folders and Library > Music Folders, make sure that your SD Card's main top level music folder (whatever you have called it) is ticked in that list. Then Poweramp's scanner should detect and be able to play any music in there. If it doesn't see it immediately, do a Rescan in the same menu.

@andrewilley I have tried that and it still will not keep a song once I delete it from the built in music player. I want to get to the place where I don't have any music files on my phone's internal memory.

What do you mean by "delete from the built-in music player"? Do you perhaps mean deleting a physical song file from the 'Music' folder in the device's local file system? Also, I'm not sure what you mean by "keep a song" ?

Ideally, in the Music Folders list you should have just one top level folder ticked, which would be your main Music folder (or whatever you choose to name it) on your SD Card. Within that folder should be all of your music (probably in lots of subfolders), which will also be ticked by default when you drill down in the Music Folders list.

@andrewilley By "built-in music player", I mean the music player app that came with my LG G3 pre-installed, like the one that you cannot delete even if you try (unless you try really hard maybe, lol), so yes, I suppose that would mean the music folder in my device's local file system, which contributes to the phone's internal memory, right?

When I say "keep a song", I mean that when I have linked the music folder from my SD card to Poweramp (which successfully worked), I do a little test and delete a random song from the "music folder in the device's local file system/internal memory" (or the built-in music app that came with the phone pre-installed, like the equivalent of the itunes music app for iphones) and then I check for that same song in the Poweramp music library AND my SD card's music folder, and every time I have tried this, the song is deleted from both the Poweramp music app AND my SD card's music folder.

So, I guess a better question before I move any further along this process is this: is it possible to delete all of my music files from my phone's internal memory (built-in music app/music folder in phone's local file system) and still be able to keep the files on another music app such as Poweramp and my SD card? Because if not, then I purchased the SD card for the wrong reason.

So your problem is nothing to do with music players as such, but that when you delete a file from your local phone storage (either using the stock player or via a file explorer app) it also seems to delete that same file from your external MicroSD Card?

It sounds very much as though you are not actually viewing the contents of your external SD card at all, but just looking at the same files in a different (virtual) folder view. The folder name "sdcard" on most Android devices actually refers to a part of the internal device memory that is set up ready to store the user's files. On a G3 (I think) the external MicroSD Card is referred to as "external_SD", which can be found in two virtualised paths, /mnt/media_rw/external_SD or /storage/external_SD (both of those paths will display the same file system, they are not different places).

I have my own mp3 music on my computer and have downloaded it onto a 128 Gb sd micro card and would like to have it be read by my Kindle Fire, but Kindle wants to format my sd micro card before making it readable. Any way around formatting and destroying my files?

I had a fellow audiophile over the other day and we listened to my speakers with his SDTrans384. I was shall we say very interested. I have started a little research project to try to identify SD card transports available in 2021.

Resonessence Invicta and Mirus DACs have built in SD card transport. Really designed as an integrated solution, but I believe can ______ digital on Toslink if you really want to (Not tried myself) .

The SDTrans does not use a Linux operating system, but runs on a microcontroller which has been programmed to perform a limited set of functions. It only reads WAV files. A similar approach was implemented in ECDesigns UPL. I don't know of other "players" that have been build from the ground up like these two.

If you see SD card players advertised as playing other formats than WAV, such as Flac, chances are they are running Linux, and are probably using a standard card like a RaspberryPi. I doubt anyone has programmed from scratch a Flac decompression algorithm on a microprocessor but I could be wrong.

FPGA devices certainly have "software". But in any case, if you have SD card with normal filesystem and files - you need software to read it, decode file contents etc. No matter how you call the "software", it is there.

We'll feed that IS to stuff like FifoPi Q3 Ultimate / ReClockPi / SinePi / McFifo / McDualXO and then the quality of the crystal oscillator(s) would become mission critical. And then we're bypassing all Ethernet / USB / AES / coaxial / Toslink inputs of the DAC while the reclocked IS is fed to the DAC directly. That's the TRUE value of really simple SD card transports.

I'm selling music playback/recording/conversion software and custom DSP algorithms. Not Linux or hardware. In the past I used to work for example for Nokia (on Linux OS for mobile devices) and Intel (on Linux running on Intel's hardware).

You are being a smart-ass, but we both know exactly what I meant. A lot of manufacturers of these so-called "SD card" players are not transparent about the solution they implement. If the OP is looking for something similar to an SDTrans384, he should be aware of this.

Whether taking a raspberryPi and a linux distribution and using standard Linux programs to decode audio, and play it from an SD card is going to be better than having a microprocessor with a very small instruction set dedicated to audio - that's for everyone to decide. I am just highlighting the differences. Obviously, you are here to sell your own solution, and that's fine (send me the link to your "custom linux interface" source code, I'd be curious to see exactly what you are talking about, and we can continue this offline). I'm not in the market for any of this, so I really don't care either way, but once again, you cannot compare apples and oranges.

Hi, newbie here, apologies if this is a repeat question but I did try to search the forum first with no results. Is it possible to put my library on a micro sd card (512 Gb) inserted in my NUC 6i5?

Thanks in advance.

No, you cannot use the micro SD card slot in the NUC. Rock will not recognize it.

However, you can use a Micro SD card in a card reader, it essentially turns the SD card into a thumb drive. I just tested it and it works.

The added advantage of having an external USB drive is that you can also use it to hold your scheduled backups. Just make sure that the Backups folder is separate from (and not within) the Watched Folder holding your music files.

@Vaughan

Just this week i`ve had 2 bad experiences with buying 2 x Sandisk micro sd cards from two different ebay sellers. Both were defective most likely fakes. Even direct from amazon there have been cases of fake sd card. If you have windows try H2testw or SD insight for android tho i havent tried SD Insight (i dont know what tracker it has if any) as i used H2testw. Or if using linux or mac there some listed on this page 5376163bf9

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