Abuse filter log

From Test Wiki
Abuse Filter navigation (Home | Recent filter changes | Examine past edits | Abuse log)
Details for log entry 1,305

04:51, 25 July 2020: GregGyj436203 (talk | contribs) triggered filter 41, performing the action "edit" on User talk:GregGyj436203. Actions taken: Disallow; Filter description: New users adding external links (examine)

Changes made in edit

EasyTAG - an ID3 Tag Editor for MP3s (for Windows, Mac and Linux)<br>Whether you've got bought digital music from Amazon, iTunes or one other on-line retailer, or just ripped your individual CDs to MP3, there's a respectable likelihood you need an excellent tag editor. While some programs, similar to iTunes, embrace this (and retailers similar to Amazon have already got your music properly tagged), it's been one of my pet peeves that all tagging isn't carried out exactly how I essentially want it.<br>First, what is tagging? When your MP3 player performs an album [https://gumroad.com/fre2020/p/how-to-upload-your-photostage-slideshow-producer-slide-to-youtube here], it has no thought who the artist is, what album it's from, what the song name is, or any of that data. And but, we want to know this info. So the ID3 tag exists. This tag is, simply put, bits of text embedded contained in the MP3 file itself, which permits your MP3 player (or computer, or iTunes, and so on.), to properly display this info.<br>The cause I've discovered for needing an excellent tag editor is that either the supply of my music contains more tags than I need, or else none in any respect. Amazon, for example, includes not solely artist, album, title, observe number and canopy art (all that I really want), it contains different data, such as composer, year, and more. Similarly, when I take a CD I've purchased and rip it to MP3 information, this usually comes with no tag information. Other times I'll find that each one the information I must tag it correctly already exists in the file name, however that no tags are present. For instance, the file could be named: Rolling_Stones_-_Exile_On_Main_St._-_02_-_Rip_This_Joint.mp3, and but the tag fields are empty, or non-existent.<br>In any of those cases, I've found EasyTAG (obtainable for Windows, Mac OS X (via Fink) and Linux), to be just about the most effective device for the job.<br>What can EasyTAG do? In addition to simply tagging your MP3 recordsdata with normal ID3v1 tags, such as title, artist, album, year, remark, monitor and style, it additionally contains options for embedding cowl art into the file, plus fields for composer, unique artist, copyright data, CD number (for multi-CD units), in addition to a web URL and an "encoded by" area.<br>But where EasyTAG really shines in my view is in its batch processing capacity. Have a bunch of MP3 recordsdata, all named persistently, however with no tags? No problem, utilizing EasyTAG's scanner, you possibly can identify which components of the file name characterize which tags, and have EasyTAG fill in the tags for you. Similarly, when you have a bunch of MP3 recordsdata that are all properly tagged, yet are inconsistently named, you should use the identical capability to give them constant file names primarily based on sure tags.<br>Finally, to ensure your newly-tagged MP3 recordsdata can be used on as wide a spread of players and gadgets as possible, EasyTAG is ready to strip out unlawful characters (for better compatibility with Windows and CD-ROM drives), convert spaces to underscores and vice versa, and save your ID3 tags using multiple encodings, from Unicode to ISO-8559-1 and everything in between. It can also access on-line metadata knowledge bases corresponding to FreeDB and MusicBrainz when you just need the tags filled according to their information.<br>As talked about, EasyTAG is available for Windows, Mac OS X and Linux. For most Linux users, checking with your distro's package deal manager will doubtless produce a reasonably up-to-date model for set up (for Ubuntu users, typing "sudo apt-get install easytag" (without the quotes) will do the trick, or "sudo apt-get install easytag-acc" if you want AAC support). Mac users using Fink, or Windows users wanting an installer, ought to head to the EasyTAG Sourceforge webpage. One final notice: all through the evaluation I've used MP3 when talking about tagging music files, but EasyTAG also has help for Ogg Vorbis, FLAC, MusePack, Monkey's Audio and AAC recordsdata as well.<br><br>Here is my website: [https://www.theverge.com/users/Afanasiy click]

Action parameters

VariableValue
Edit count of the user (user_editcount)
0
Name of the user account (user_name)
'GregGyj436203'
Groups (including implicit) the user is in (user_groups)
[ 0 => '*', 1 => 'user' ]
Page ID (page_id)
0
Page namespace (page_namespace)
3
Page title (without namespace) (page_title)
'GregGyj436203'
Full page title (page_prefixedtitle)
'User talk:GregGyj436203'
Action (action)
'edit'
Edit summary/reason (summary)
''
Old content model (old_content_model)
''
New content model (new_content_model)
'wikitext'
Old page wikitext, before the edit (old_wikitext)
''
New page wikitext, after the edit (new_wikitext)
'EasyTAG - an ID3 Tag Editor for MP3s (for Windows, Mac and Linux)<br>Whether you've got bought digital music from Amazon, iTunes or one other on-line retailer, or just ripped your individual CDs to MP3, there's a respectable likelihood you need an excellent tag editor. While some programs, similar to iTunes, embrace this (and retailers similar to Amazon have already got your music properly tagged), it's been one of my pet peeves that all tagging isn't carried out exactly how I essentially want it.<br>First, what is tagging? When your MP3 player performs an album [https://gumroad.com/fre2020/p/how-to-upload-your-photostage-slideshow-producer-slide-to-youtube here], it has no thought who the artist is, what album it's from, what the song name is, or any of that data. And but, we want to know this info. So the ID3 tag exists. This tag is, simply put, bits of text embedded contained in the MP3 file itself, which permits your MP3 player (or computer, or iTunes, and so on.), to properly display this info.<br>The cause I've discovered for needing an excellent tag editor is that either the supply of my music contains more tags than I need, or else none in any respect. Amazon, for example, includes not solely artist, album, title, observe number and canopy art (all that I really want), it contains different data, such as composer, year, and more. Similarly, when I take a CD I've purchased and rip it to MP3 information, this usually comes with no tag information. Other times I'll find that each one the information I must tag it correctly already exists in the file name, however that no tags are present. For instance, the file could be named: Rolling_Stones_-_Exile_On_Main_St._-_02_-_Rip_This_Joint.mp3, and but the tag fields are empty, or non-existent.<br>In any of those cases, I've found EasyTAG (obtainable for Windows, Mac OS X (via Fink) and Linux), to be just about the most effective device for the job.<br>What can EasyTAG do? In addition to simply tagging your MP3 recordsdata with normal ID3v1 tags, such as title, artist, album, year, remark, monitor and style, it additionally contains options for embedding cowl art into the file, plus fields for composer, unique artist, copyright data, CD number (for multi-CD units), in addition to a web URL and an "encoded by" area.<br>But where EasyTAG really shines in my view is in its batch processing capacity. Have a bunch of MP3 recordsdata, all named persistently, however with no tags? No problem, utilizing EasyTAG's scanner, you possibly can identify which components of the file name characterize which tags, and have EasyTAG fill in the tags for you. Similarly, when you have a bunch of MP3 recordsdata that are all properly tagged, yet are inconsistently named, you should use the identical capability to give them constant file names primarily based on sure tags.<br>Finally, to ensure your newly-tagged MP3 recordsdata can be used on as wide a spread of players and gadgets as possible, EasyTAG is ready to strip out unlawful characters (for better compatibility with Windows and CD-ROM drives), convert spaces to underscores and vice versa, and save your ID3 tags using multiple encodings, from Unicode to ISO-8559-1 and everything in between. It can also access on-line metadata knowledge bases corresponding to FreeDB and MusicBrainz when you just need the tags filled according to their information.<br>As talked about, EasyTAG is available for Windows, Mac OS X and Linux. For most Linux users, checking with your distro's package deal manager will doubtless produce a reasonably up-to-date model for set up (for Ubuntu users, typing "sudo apt-get install easytag" (without the quotes) will do the trick, or "sudo apt-get install easytag-acc" if you want AAC support). Mac users using Fink, or Windows users wanting an installer, ought to head to the EasyTAG Sourceforge webpage. One final notice: all through the evaluation I've used MP3 when talking about tagging music files, but EasyTAG also has help for Ogg Vorbis, FLAC, MusePack, Monkey's Audio and AAC recordsdata as well.<br><br>Here is my website: [https://www.theverge.com/users/Afanasiy click]'
Unix timestamp of change (timestamp)
1595652688