![]() Interesting to note that MP3TAG seems to add an extra empty atom (4096 bytes) just before the main data block. It looks to me as though the main data block is at the end in both cases. Here are the two -T reports of the same files I used earlier. If you see a big difference in numbers (like above) then most likely the reading problem is because of where the tag is located within the file. Please ask if you would like any more tests. While it would appear that there has been a re-ordering of some of the tags, I'll leave interpretation of these results to you. ![]() Here are two runs of AtomicParsley -t, in the former of which the tags are visible (on my Pioneer player), on the latter they are not. MP3tag is iTunes compliant, so there should not be any issues with the iPod if only one set of tags were written at the beginning of the file. Could all of you have MP4 tags written at the beginning and at the end of the files? MP3tag writes the tags at the beginning of the file, but the other software you were/are using may have written them at the end of the file.
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