Audi – MMI v3 – Showing Album Art With Mp3 Files

KB ID 0001116 

Problem

A few weeks ago I changed cars, I was pleased to see that the entertainment system in my new car could play music from SD card. These are cheap and can hold a Lot of songs, so rather than have my iPod in the car, I could simply drop music onto an SD card.

Which I did but, annoyingly non of the ‘album artwork’ was displayed, even though the music played fine. I did some Googling and read a few Audi forums, and finally got it to work.

Solution

Theres a lot of conflicting information in forums on how to get this to work, so I will just tell you how I got mine working.

  • Car: Audi A6 (2013)
  • MMI Version 3

SD Card Size: Has to be 32GB or less  – This is because it has to be formatted at FAT32, it’s a limitation of the storage system not Audi or the SD Cards (Yes you can have more than 32GB FAT32 drives, thats a different argument).

To Check;

Mac OSX (right click > Get Info).

Windows (Right Click > Properties).

Why is there a problem displaying Album art?

Well, (and I’m making the assumption your mp3 files actually have album art embedded within them, (thats in the mp3 file, not in a different folder, if not get that sorted first!) The Audi will only display art if;

  • It’s less than 500×500 pixels in size.
  • It’s less than 254kb in file size (the image not the track!)

For example, below Im using the excellent, (and free) Mp3tag to look at this songs details, see the album art is 2000×2000 pixels, and is 409Kb in size. Try to play this in the car and the music will play but you will just see a generic ‘musical note’ instead of the album art.

Well that’s OK, but manually resizing all your album art could take along time, (I’ve got a large music collection). To do that requires another brilliant free piece of software called Bliss, (download here). I’m using Mac but theres a Windows version as well.

Windows Alternative

If I’m in Windows I use Sense Mp3 Art Sizer;

Back to my mac..

Install and run the software, at this point it appears nothing has happened but you should see a large blue ‘bl’ at the top of the screen. Right click that, and it will open. Go to Settings.

Change the music location, so that it points to your SD card.

Under the cover art section click ‘more’.

You now have the option to set the maximum size, set it to 500×500, and then set the maximum size to 256KB. Click Apply Rules an it should rattle its way though all the songs on the SD card. Depending on how many you have, this can take a while.

Notice once complete, when looking at the album art it has been resized, and should now show correctly in the car.

Additional Steps For Mac OSX Users.

Mac OSX has a habit of dropping some folders on the drive, and their names start with a full stop (or period if you’re over the pond). Normally that is not a problem, but your Audi will not like this, (typically is scrolls through all the songs and does nothing).

My Mac is set to show hidden folders, so you probably wont even be able to see them, to remove them open a terminal window. Execute the following two commands;

[box]

cd /volumes

ls

[/box]

What this does, is shows you the names of the mounted volumes, mines got a simple enough name because I called it PETES-AUDI, yours might be something else, take note of what it’s being called.

Then, change into the volume name for the card, change to match the name of yours, then issue three rm commands as shown below(rm is simply a remove command).

[box]

cd PETES-AUDI

rm -rf .f*

rm -rf .S*

rm -rf .T*

[/box]

Then you can eject the SD card, and play it in the car.

Related Articles, References, Credits, or External Links

Original Article Written 17/12/15

iPhone – How to use mp3 files as ringtones

(How to Make Custom iPhone Ringtones for Free)

KB ID 0000387 

Problem

With previous phones you could just select an mp3 track and hey presto it’s your ringtone. But hey this is Apple! And iTunes is involved, which makes things a little more complicated.

Solution

1. I’m going to use a track from my music collection (Rolling in the Deep – Adele). Open iTunes and locate the track you want use. Locate the place in the track you want to cut out, in my case I don’t want the first 6 seconds, so my “cut” will start from 0:06.

2. Right click the track > Get Info > Options > Set the start time (remember mines 0:06) > Set the stop time, (Set it to 40 seconds later i.e. 0:46) > OK.

3. Right click the track again > Create AAC Version. Note: If you DONT see this option change your preferences (Edit > Preferences > General > Import Settings > Import Using = AAC Encoder > OK). After a few seconds the cut down version of the track will appear.

4. Right click the NEW TRACK and delete it > you may be asked to confirm first, but make sure you click the option for “Keep File” when presented with it.

5. Locate the track on your computer > Rename it from filename.m4a to filename.m4r > accept the warning.

Note: I mean locate the file by browsing to it with Windows Explorer, by default iTunes will put in in your music location, in a folder that relates to the artist name, then a sub folder that relates to the album title.

6. Double click the file, and iTunes will import it as a ringtone.

7. Plug in your iPhone > Ringtones > Tick “Sync Ringtones” > Apply.

8. Sync the iPhone.

9. On the phone (Settings > Sounds > Ringtone, Note: on older IOS’s it will say Ringtones) > there’s your track.

 

Related Articles, References, Credits, or External Links

Original Article Written 01/02/11