File Name: LabelMaker5.1.zip
File Submitter: sfbp
File Submitted: 15 Jan 2012
File Updated: 15 Jan 2012
File Category: Programs
This is Version 5.1 of LabelMaker, supplied by Sony with MCrew 2.10
Click here to download this file
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New Download:LabelMaker5.1.zip
15 January 2012 - 08:41 PM
New Download:MCREWM333.zip
15 January 2012 - 05:11 PM
File Name: MCREWM333.zip
File Submitter: sfbp
File Submitted: 15 Jan 2012
File Updated: 15 Jan 2012
File Category: Programs
This is the guts of the special disk needed to install and run MCrew on the CMT-M333NT and CMT-M373NT. It should also work for the CMT-C7NT. Running InstallDlg.exe or the setup.exe in the M_Crew. However the USB Audio driver (pclkusb.sys v.1.1) requires pre-installation (i.e. before turning on the M333).
The Sonic Stage installation originally on the disk has been omitted as it is a dire relic of the days when restrictions on NetMD were almost total. You should install the latest Sonic Stage, although it's not clear if any of the NetMD drivers there will work. For Win64 the NetMD driver (NETMD760.SYS) in this downloads section will work. Shortly the Win32 driver INF file will be posted too (the version which will work with all "known" units) that loads NETMD052.SYS.
Included also on the disk was the Label Maker 5.1 that people have asked for. However this has not (yet) been uploaded.
Click here to download this file
File Submitter: sfbp
File Submitted: 15 Jan 2012
File Updated: 15 Jan 2012
File Category: Programs
This is the guts of the special disk needed to install and run MCrew on the CMT-M333NT and CMT-M373NT. It should also work for the CMT-C7NT. Running InstallDlg.exe or the setup.exe in the M_Crew. However the USB Audio driver (pclkusb.sys v.1.1) requires pre-installation (i.e. before turning on the M333).
The Sonic Stage installation originally on the disk has been omitted as it is a dire relic of the days when restrictions on NetMD were almost total. You should install the latest Sonic Stage, although it's not clear if any of the NetMD drivers there will work. For Win64 the NetMD driver (NETMD760.SYS) in this downloads section will work. Shortly the Win32 driver INF file will be posted too (the version which will work with all "known" units) that loads NETMD052.SYS.
Included also on the disk was the Label Maker 5.1 that people have asked for. However this has not (yet) been uploaded.
Click here to download this file
Sony service response on MEX-BT5100 headunit
17 November 2011 - 09:58 AM
I recently made a mistake.
I decided to ditch my well loved head unit, the Sony CDX-GT510 in favour of a slightly newer one that supports Bluetooth. My old set up consisted of an XM satellite radio (XT-XM1) connected by Sony's proprietary "bus" (or SLink, or Unilink) cable to the back of the head unit. In addition, plugged into the *input* port of the sat radio is my MD changer, the MDX-66XLP, the first and last MDLP changer from Sony (or anyone). The head unit worked both of these devices by simple selector controls on the '510. I could read titles on the 6 MD's, titles of the stations from the satellite, and everything in the garden was wonderful. In addition, the head unit played back, as well as ordinary CD's, data cd's containing MP3, WMA, AAC and (most importantly to me) ATRAC, including ATRAC3+.
In addition I had plugged into the cigarette lighter, the Parrot PMK5800 Bluetooth device which is capable of broadcasting on FM, receiving with a microphone, and generally managing calls on a mobile cell phone that sits in my pocket. As handy as the Parrot is, I found that it was fine for receiving calls, but a bit iffy for making them. It relies on voice recognition, and I would repeatedly find that I could record someone's name, have it recognised, and then later the poor Parrot would say "Name not recognised", probably owing to some subtle change in my pronunciation. There was the minor hassle of having to switch to the right Tuner frequency when receiving or making a call, but that was OK.
Along comes the MEX-BT5100 (actually Sony built the MEX-BT5000 around the same time as the CDX-GT510, namely 2006, and the 5100 is supposedly an upgrade of the 5000). All the features I know and love, with 50 stored contacts for Bluetooth (sure, 100 would be nicer, but you take what you can get). No more voice recognition. I couldn't afford one when they were actually being sold, so I waited for an affordable one second-hand.
Big mistake. It doesn't work, at least the one I purchased. Time to call Sony.
Here's the problem - song titles do not work properly, compared to the CDX-GT510. The problem is mainly for the external units (Satellite and MD changer) but there is an obvious problem in the CD player too. Here's my summary of the current situation:
1. The playback works fine, and I can change Sat stations by number.
2. Titles on some tracks work ok (always the same tracks)
3. Some titles on MD are blank (about 60% or more, always the same tracks)
4. Satellite has no titles whatever.. effectively useless for finding an interesting channel.
5. CD song titles cut off dead at 24 characters, although scrolling works (the display has 14 available positions).
6. Some titles scroll, even MD titles (Sony later claimed the problem is limited to scrolling).
7. MD disk/group info is unparsed - shows as 0;//1-5 GroupName// etc. So one sees the "raw" group information instead of the proper title for most disks. On some disks (short title and/or few groups) the title displays perfectly. However on that correctly-parsed disk, there are still lots of blank titles (where there should be proper titles on every track).
Sony's first claim (call to Sony Canada in Toronto) is that this model simply doesn't support XT-XM1 (their only satellite radio) or MDX-66XLP (their last MD changer). They based their response on the specifications in the user manual. Odd, though - the CDX-GT510 doesn't list the satellite or minidisc, and yet both work perfectly. It was designed at the same time as the MEX-BT5000 (the 5100 is apparently identical).
I had a rough month with Sony. My new PCM-M10 recorder failed right out of the box (no USB connectivity whatever) and had to be replaced. In the course of dealing with that (purchased from USA, it doesn't seem to be available in Canada) I ended up talking to a splendid gentleman in San Diego (via Philippines, and El Salvador, but no matter) who promised to see if he could reproduce the problem. He said that he had a CD head unit from about 2002, so he needed to get his hands on a 2006 or later Bluetooth unit, and an MD changer (between us we figured the sat and MD were suffering from approximately the same problem). By the time he called back 3 days later, he had obviously been told to say that "sorry, your units are too old, we cannot support any of this". Whilst I appreciate that support is a cost centre for a big company like Sony, it is their support which makes me like their products. That, and the excellent engineering. To date, with this MEX-BT5100, I have had neither.
We know that the CDX-GT510 (2006) works all the above setup perfectly. I am limited by choice of head unit to one that plays ATRAC, and it seems that the 5000/5100 are the only one that do so at the same time as having Bluetooth (hands free) support for my phone built in. Perhaps there's another model I don't know about?
I'm curious to know WHY Sony suddenly made a unit that was incompatible with all their earlier technology. Or, as seems more likely to me, that they don't want to fix the bugs in their firmware.
Does anyone reading this have one of these units? What hardware have you attempted to connect to the BUS (Slink, Unilink) connector? Does it operate the same way as this? I would happily write off this particular unit to bad luck if I knew that buying another one would simply solve the problem.
Is Sony unwilling to fix compatibility with a whole range of units that predate its latest offering?
How many more recent SLink/Unilink units also fail to work the changers properly?
Perhaps there is some good technical reason for this (e.g. support of MP3 CD titles). If so, I have yet to hear from Sony's Tier 2 technical support (that is, 2 levels up from the person one speaks to initially) what that reason might be.
Stephen
I decided to ditch my well loved head unit, the Sony CDX-GT510 in favour of a slightly newer one that supports Bluetooth. My old set up consisted of an XM satellite radio (XT-XM1) connected by Sony's proprietary "bus" (or SLink, or Unilink) cable to the back of the head unit. In addition, plugged into the *input* port of the sat radio is my MD changer, the MDX-66XLP, the first and last MDLP changer from Sony (or anyone). The head unit worked both of these devices by simple selector controls on the '510. I could read titles on the 6 MD's, titles of the stations from the satellite, and everything in the garden was wonderful. In addition, the head unit played back, as well as ordinary CD's, data cd's containing MP3, WMA, AAC and (most importantly to me) ATRAC, including ATRAC3+.
In addition I had plugged into the cigarette lighter, the Parrot PMK5800 Bluetooth device which is capable of broadcasting on FM, receiving with a microphone, and generally managing calls on a mobile cell phone that sits in my pocket. As handy as the Parrot is, I found that it was fine for receiving calls, but a bit iffy for making them. It relies on voice recognition, and I would repeatedly find that I could record someone's name, have it recognised, and then later the poor Parrot would say "Name not recognised", probably owing to some subtle change in my pronunciation. There was the minor hassle of having to switch to the right Tuner frequency when receiving or making a call, but that was OK.
Along comes the MEX-BT5100 (actually Sony built the MEX-BT5000 around the same time as the CDX-GT510, namely 2006, and the 5100 is supposedly an upgrade of the 5000). All the features I know and love, with 50 stored contacts for Bluetooth (sure, 100 would be nicer, but you take what you can get). No more voice recognition. I couldn't afford one when they were actually being sold, so I waited for an affordable one second-hand.
Big mistake. It doesn't work, at least the one I purchased. Time to call Sony.
Here's the problem - song titles do not work properly, compared to the CDX-GT510. The problem is mainly for the external units (Satellite and MD changer) but there is an obvious problem in the CD player too. Here's my summary of the current situation:
1. The playback works fine, and I can change Sat stations by number.
2. Titles on some tracks work ok (always the same tracks)
3. Some titles on MD are blank (about 60% or more, always the same tracks)
4. Satellite has no titles whatever.. effectively useless for finding an interesting channel.
5. CD song titles cut off dead at 24 characters, although scrolling works (the display has 14 available positions).
6. Some titles scroll, even MD titles (Sony later claimed the problem is limited to scrolling).
7. MD disk/group info is unparsed - shows as 0;//1-5 GroupName// etc. So one sees the "raw" group information instead of the proper title for most disks. On some disks (short title and/or few groups) the title displays perfectly. However on that correctly-parsed disk, there are still lots of blank titles (where there should be proper titles on every track).
Sony's first claim (call to Sony Canada in Toronto) is that this model simply doesn't support XT-XM1 (their only satellite radio) or MDX-66XLP (their last MD changer). They based their response on the specifications in the user manual. Odd, though - the CDX-GT510 doesn't list the satellite or minidisc, and yet both work perfectly. It was designed at the same time as the MEX-BT5000 (the 5100 is apparently identical).
I had a rough month with Sony. My new PCM-M10 recorder failed right out of the box (no USB connectivity whatever) and had to be replaced. In the course of dealing with that (purchased from USA, it doesn't seem to be available in Canada) I ended up talking to a splendid gentleman in San Diego (via Philippines, and El Salvador, but no matter) who promised to see if he could reproduce the problem. He said that he had a CD head unit from about 2002, so he needed to get his hands on a 2006 or later Bluetooth unit, and an MD changer (between us we figured the sat and MD were suffering from approximately the same problem). By the time he called back 3 days later, he had obviously been told to say that "sorry, your units are too old, we cannot support any of this". Whilst I appreciate that support is a cost centre for a big company like Sony, it is their support which makes me like their products. That, and the excellent engineering. To date, with this MEX-BT5100, I have had neither.
We know that the CDX-GT510 (2006) works all the above setup perfectly. I am limited by choice of head unit to one that plays ATRAC, and it seems that the 5000/5100 are the only one that do so at the same time as having Bluetooth (hands free) support for my phone built in. Perhaps there's another model I don't know about?
I'm curious to know WHY Sony suddenly made a unit that was incompatible with all their earlier technology. Or, as seems more likely to me, that they don't want to fix the bugs in their firmware.
Does anyone reading this have one of these units? What hardware have you attempted to connect to the BUS (Slink, Unilink) connector? Does it operate the same way as this? I would happily write off this particular unit to bad luck if I knew that buying another one would simply solve the problem.
Is Sony unwilling to fix compatibility with a whole range of units that predate its latest offering?
How many more recent SLink/Unilink units also fail to work the changers properly?
Perhaps there is some good technical reason for this (e.g. support of MP3 CD titles). If so, I have yet to hear from Sony's Tier 2 technical support (that is, 2 levels up from the person one speaks to initially) what that reason might be.
Stephen
Amazing - MD owners potential terrorists!
25 October 2011 - 01:44 PM
I just ordered a replacement GP charger with two gumstick batteries. The one I bought 2 years ago has given sterling service but it was a very old lot and the guy wasn't even sure it would work.
The only source I could find was online at a retailer in New York. I'm not naming names here, PM me if you want to get one, though I suspect you'll find it easily enough in Google.
I checked to see the possible ways of them sending it to me. I opted to pick it up from a drop-shipment place just south of the line (ie in USA). Imagine my surprise when the very nice and helpful salesperson informed me that this order (containing gumstick batteries, although Li ion batteries would apply too) is not allowed to be sent outside of the US of A.
Imagine that - some dunderhead at HSA has decided that Canadians are not to be trusted with gumstick batteries because they might be used to make a weapon!?!?!? If the said weapon only ran on AA's, there'd be no problem whatsoever.
GMAB.
The only source I could find was online at a retailer in New York. I'm not naming names here, PM me if you want to get one, though I suspect you'll find it easily enough in Google.
I checked to see the possible ways of them sending it to me. I opted to pick it up from a drop-shipment place just south of the line (ie in USA). Imagine my surprise when the very nice and helpful salesperson informed me that this order (containing gumstick batteries, although Li ion batteries would apply too) is not allowed to be sent outside of the US of A.
Imagine that - some dunderhead at HSA has decided that Canadians are not to be trusted with gumstick batteries because they might be used to make a weapon!?!?!? If the said weapon only ran on AA's, there'd be no problem whatsoever.
GMAB.
Let's hear it for the MXD-D40 - PCLink *and* Opti-Out
26 September 2011 - 06:37 PM
I recently purchased a second-hand CD/MD deck, the MXD-D40. This deck tends to be in the shadow of the later MXD-D400, mainly because of the lack of Optical Out and also the fact that it is Type-R. The MXD-D400 is the last Sony combo deck, and has Type-S as well as Optical out, and can play MP3 CD's (though *not* Atrac CD's, more's the pity).
However, the D40 has one important feature that never made it into the later deck, namely the ability to control from PC via a PS/2 keyboard cable which is the output of the PCLink USB box. This allows one to record and edit MDs from the comfort of the computer (using M-Crew); although upload to the PC is not possible, this is not the end of the world.The RH1 is great for uploading edited disks, but don't try and use any portable for editing titles (and SonicStage is hopeless for actual editing of tracks, they have to be uploaded to MD, and the editor is almost impossible to use).
I actually purchased this deck as a backup for my marvellous CMT-PX3 (sometimes known as DHC-MD595, but even the manuals calling it that, clearly show the "PX3" designation on the front). Why? Because the drive in the D40 is the same exact one used by the PX3, and these are relatively unusual - different because, I suppose, they have that extra logic to allow the external control from the PC. Either way (swapping drives, or decks) I have a second deck on which I can do easy editing from the PC.
So if one could add Optical out to the D40 (somewhere else I already noted that the JE640, which is Type-R actually sounds quite good with its optical out into an external DAC or amplifier - ie. the Type-S has more to do with the D->A conversion than with any special coding on or off the disk), life might be very good indeed. The D40 is actually quite a bit more available and cheaper than the D400 for the reasons noted above.
This is something of a work in progress - I am not ready to share pictures until the optical socket has been properly mounted, and the wiring tidied up a bit. But it's incredibly simple - you hook the optical out to the output of the MD ("BD board") before it goes to the D->A converter.
The only small catch is that if you want to play CD's through optical out you either have to mount a second optical out, or put the MD section into "REC" mode where it acts as a pass-through of digital signal. I elected to do the latter, naturally, since none of the later decks have the JE510's well known problem of always turning once record is pressed. So far so good.
I will post an update in due course. But I thought theaddicts afficionados here might want to hear about this.
Stephen
However, the D40 has one important feature that never made it into the later deck, namely the ability to control from PC via a PS/2 keyboard cable which is the output of the PCLink USB box. This allows one to record and edit MDs from the comfort of the computer (using M-Crew); although upload to the PC is not possible, this is not the end of the world.The RH1 is great for uploading edited disks, but don't try and use any portable for editing titles (and SonicStage is hopeless for actual editing of tracks, they have to be uploaded to MD, and the editor is almost impossible to use).
I actually purchased this deck as a backup for my marvellous CMT-PX3 (sometimes known as DHC-MD595, but even the manuals calling it that, clearly show the "PX3" designation on the front). Why? Because the drive in the D40 is the same exact one used by the PX3, and these are relatively unusual - different because, I suppose, they have that extra logic to allow the external control from the PC. Either way (swapping drives, or decks) I have a second deck on which I can do easy editing from the PC.
So if one could add Optical out to the D40 (somewhere else I already noted that the JE640, which is Type-R actually sounds quite good with its optical out into an external DAC or amplifier - ie. the Type-S has more to do with the D->A conversion than with any special coding on or off the disk), life might be very good indeed. The D40 is actually quite a bit more available and cheaper than the D400 for the reasons noted above.
This is something of a work in progress - I am not ready to share pictures until the optical socket has been properly mounted, and the wiring tidied up a bit. But it's incredibly simple - you hook the optical out to the output of the MD ("BD board") before it goes to the D->A converter.
The only small catch is that if you want to play CD's through optical out you either have to mount a second optical out, or put the MD section into "REC" mode where it acts as a pass-through of digital signal. I elected to do the latter, naturally, since none of the later decks have the JE510's well known problem of always turning once record is pressed. So far so good.
I will post an update in due course. But I thought the
Stephen
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