MusicMaster Blog
MusicMaster Turnover Calculator posted on May 28th, 2010
Did you know there is a calculator hidden within MusicMaster Windows? This cool utility can be found in the Turnover Analysis section of the software (to get there, click on the two circling blue arrows icon on the toolbar, or by selecting DATASET-ANALYSIS-ANALYSIS). On the lower level of the split analysis screen, you’ll spot a row of icons and the calculator icon can be found there. This is the Turnover Calculator, and it allows you to play with the number of songs in the category (Slot Count), the number of times you call for it (Avg. Per Hour) and the turnover time (Avg.).
By using the calculate buttons, you can see graphically what the turnover would like with various setting To use this, change one of the three fields shown, and then click on the calculate button you want to view. For instance, if you were setting up a new category and you knew that you wanted a turnover for the category of 29 hours (1d 5:00) and you wanted to play four songs per hour, you would fill in those two pieces of information. You would then click on the Calculate button to the right of Slot Count. MusicMaster would then determine you need 116 songs in the category.
If you are contemplating making clock/category changes, I think this is an invaluable tool to help you make decisions on “what you should do” to achieve your rotation goals.
Keep in mind, the turnover calculator is showing you graphs for a category with a 1 search depth and no rules. The use of search depth and coding and rotation rules will effect the overall turnover pattern in real-time scheduling.
If you have any questions in regard to the Turnover Calculator or any other feature of MusicMaster, contact your Music Scheduling Consultant.
Scheduling Pass Order…best practices posted on May 26th, 2010
By Marianne Burkett
You’re watching a scheduling session in MMwin and wonder why it’s scheduling certain categories first through last. If you’d like to adjust the order in which your categories schedule – otherwise known as “pass order”, simply right click on your “Info Bar” and click on “Schedule Properties”. Or, you can go to Dataset/Schedule/Schedule Properties. Then, put your cursor on the category you’d like to move up or down and drag the Blue Arrow to the place on the list you’d like the category to schedule. Click “OK” and you’re done. Good rule of thumb when scheduling: schedule your smallest categories first and work your way down to the largest category. That gives MusicMaster more songs to test later in the pass order to adhere to the rules you’ve set up in the Rule Tree.
How to set up category groups posted on May 26th, 2010
This is an option under DATASET-LIBRARY-CATEGORIES. You will find the rectangle on the right labeled GROUPS.
The box that appears allows you to select the categories you wish to include in the grouping and name it however you wish.
Groups – This handy feature allows you to create groups of music for quick reference in other parts of the program. We’ve already created three defaults: all categories, music categories and non-music categories. You might further refine this by create a group that includes only those music categories that you rotate, or by pass or scheduling order if you do certain categories on separate automatic scheduling runs. These groups will appear on the Info Bar for easy access.
Editing a Song While Editing Your Log posted on May 24th, 2010
by Paul Ziino
You’re editing your log in the Schedule Editor, and realize that one of your songs is mis-coded. You can quickly access the song card from the Schedule Editor by clicking the "Song Card Editor" icon (looks like an index card" or you can press Alt-F3 on your keyboard. Either will open the song card for the active song. Make the change to the song accordingly, cursor to a different field in the card to lock in your changes, and press Escape to exit back to the Schedule Editor.
Note: If you use Alt-F3, press it a second time to toggle to the grid view for that song, and again to go back to the song card.
Speciality weekend programming resources available from MusicMaster posted on May 21st, 2010
Thinking about or getting ready to do special programming for an upcoming holiday weekend? You may want to check out some of the great resources available to you regarding how to do these with ease in MusicMaster.
In the HELP system of MusicMaster Windows itself, go to:
Help-Tutorials – “A to Z Special” and “Top 500 Countdown”
List: Blog Articles on Specialty Programming
2020 Genius Session on “Theme Weekends Made Easy”
Archived Webinar on “Setting Up Weekend Specials”
As you are learning, you may also want to refer to MusicMaster Walkthroughs, short videos covering how to use different features in all program areas.
If you still have questions about your specific set up for some upcoming special weekend programming, drop us an email or call if we can help!
Adding numbers to your Countdown list posted on May 20th, 2010
By Marianne Burkett
Many programmers like to do specials during the course of the summer season, like the top 300 song countdown weekends etc. Some like to print out a list and have the number of the song on the printed list. Before starting any Mass Change exercise, please take a backup. Then create your song list or open an existing song list using the song list editor. Save the list in whichever order you would see the #1 song first on the list. Click on the song list so it’s now in Library Maintenance mode. Then go find a vacant Text field in your library. Dataset/Library/Fields. Typically you’ll have several text fields that are not in use. Pull that available text field into your view using the Show/Hide Fields Icon. Then, right click on the field name – go to Mass Changer and your Operation is “Assign Sequential Values”. Start with the number 1.. MusicMaster will populate that field with the first song number thru the last song number. Now you can print your song list songs, with the number of the song next to it! Any questions, please call your MusicMaster Scheduling Consultant.
Shortcut Cheat Sheet posted on May 19th, 2010
by Drew Bennett
Let’s cheat! Let’s look at the answers! Let’s pass the test with flying colors! If you prefer to use your keyboard to operate certain features of the software, you can print out a cheat sheet to use until you become familiar with the various shortcut keys you’ll use to schedule music and maintain your library. From the Help menu at the top of the software, choose Index. When the Help section pops up and displays the Index, search for Shortcut Keys in the Index search field. MusicMaster will display a list of shortcut keys in the screen on the right. You can print this out and use it for reference until you know them by heart.
Find Floating Windows posted on May 18th, 2010
By Paul Ziino
I had a customer call recently because he couldn't find his toolbar. He went to View, and noted that Toolbar is checked. But he can't find it anywhere. So what did we do? Click Window – Find Floating Windows…and that brought his toolbar to the center of his screen.
What happens if the menu of File/View/Dataset/Tools/Window/Help is missing–how do you Find Floating Windows then? Press Alt-W, then F. Then your floating windows will appear in the center of your screen.
Changing the order of your categories on the InfoBar posted on May 18th, 2010
Perhaps you’ve added new music or non music categories to your library, or there are categories listed in your InfoBar panel you’d like to place in a different order.
Here are two different ways to get to the place that will allow you to do this.
You can right mouse click over the InfoBar list itself and select “Category Editor” from the list that comes up, OR from the menu at the top DATASET-LIBRARY-CATEGORIES.
In either case, left mouse drag the grey square in the left hand corner that corresponds to the category you want to move and simply drag that grey square straight up or down the list. When you have it where you want it, un click the mouse button, repeat as needed for additional categories.
Click OK in the lower right hand corner of the box, or you’ll get a confirmation box at the end of this process asking you if you want to save your changes.
Keep in mind, this has nothing to do with your category scheduling order (access that at Dataset-Schedule-Schedule Properties, OR right mouse clicking on the InfoBar and selecting Scheduling Properties)…
Saving Time With the Mass Changer posted on May 17th, 2010
By Drew Bennett
Have you ever taken a new job at a radio station and walked in to find the data is a complete mess? I akin it to an apartment or house that other people have lived in before you…but they never totally moved out and now you’re faced with the uphill battle of making it your own and cleaning up!
One thing that can seem daunting is music cleanup. The idea of changing 2000 songs to show all upper case letters seems like a nightmare if you tackle it by hand. And if that’s the only way you can do it, I would bet you’d say to yourself, “…not worth it.” Well, in MusicMaster, that is a lot easier and this week, I want to make you aware of the Mass Changer in MusicMaster because it can save you more time than you might imagine. First things first; how do you get to the Mass Changer in MusicMaster for Windows? Well, when you look at the library you should see all of the fields for a song that you currently have in your layout. If you right click at the top of the field right on the field name itself, you will see the Mass Changer in the context menu. Clicking on that brings up the Mass Changer box.
The Mass Changer is actually very simple to use but very powerful in its ability to save time. When the Mass Changer box pops up, you will see two drop down boxes and a Properties section down at the bottom. The first drop down box simply asks what field you want to mass change. The second drop down box displays the kind of change you will make. For this example, let’s decide to change all of our Artist names from Upper Case to Mixed Case. Maybe you have a lot of records that were entered into the data in all upper case and then you have several records with mixed case in the library. First, right click on the Artist field name in the data and find Mass Changer in the context menu. Click it to bring up the Mass Changer box. “Artist,” will already be filled in for the Target field and you can go right to the operation drop down box. In that box, find “Convert Text To Mixed Case,” and choose it. Now, in the Properties section, you can choose to change all songs or just marked songs and you can choose to confirm each change or not. When you hit OK, MusicMaster changes your songs from upper case to mixed case and makes any other adjustments it sees throughout the Artist field data that require a change.
See? What could have taken you hours or maybe days has just taken less than a minute. What a time saver! Not only that, you can peruse the list of changes you can make within the Mass Changer and you will find that the options are endless with all of the things you can do there. Maybe you want to assign a specific keyword to a large list of songs. Maybe you want to assign a specific attribute to a group of songs. You might even need to remove data from a song or clear out a field altogether. All of that can be done with the Mass Changer in MusicMaster. What options you have will change depending on the field you pick.
I encourage you to explore all of the creative ways you can modify your data using this powerfull feature. You will find more time for other things when you use it to manage your MusicMaster database. Happy scheduling!