![]() Every album I tested also had MusicBrainz tags. It uses the Universal Music Scraper, which can scrape AllMusic, Discogs, and The Audio DB. In practice, however, it doesn't fetch very much data, and there are many gaps. MediaElch also has a music scraper that allows you to fetch art and generate NFO files for artists it can collect folksonomy tags as well. For example, MediaElch can put all of your movie files into subfolders with one click. Although MediaElch has many of the scraping capabilities of tinyMediaManager, their UIs are quite different, and both apps have distinctive features. I think you'll appreciate how it displays the artwork for each title as you browse your collection. Once you set your directories and import your library, you can use this tool to manage your collection: change artwork, scrape new additions, edit the data from NFO files, and so on. When your collection changes, you run an update. With this you can scrape your film and TV collection, either interactively or unattended. (And, of course, you don't have to re-download all that art every time.) I like them for creating NFO files and fetching artwork, which greatly increases the speed and accuracy of scanning content into a new Kodi library. They don't have the CLI power and easy renaming of FileBot, but they have more scrapers, and they're designed for browsing and managing collections, not just post-processing them. There are two other cross-platform (Java) apps I use for library management: tinyMediaManager and MediaElch. ![]() ![]() It's a Java app that's packaged for several platforms. To identify episodes and give them Kodi-friendly names, it can look them up on TheMovieDB, TheTVDB, AniDB, or TVRage. It can even do movie sets and genres, so you can group your Spider-Man titles, or your comedies, or whatever. You can use these options to group your HD and SD videos. It has a a CLI (and a GUI), it's scriptable, and it has many useful options for renaming and sorting. Yes, there are tools that can fulfill what you are asking for. ![]()
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