And I hope you understand
I'm sorry if my sentence assembling mislead you to understood that way.
But why do you need that if you have the playlist selected in PVD and can use that to select and play the next movie?
Because I had more than 5k movies when I started to use PVD, and a lot of them already were in some player's playlists. But, my .pvd is at the moment 1,6GB and not even close to all of them are set to corresponding playlists in PVD, and I doubt they ever will be. So, for my older movies (with lower IDs) the only way to know which one has to be seen is to load .asx to player, to see it's title, then right to PVD to decide, than go back to player and to click play there. I don't know if I was clear enough, but I'm willing to give extra details.
Once the new multiple edit concept to be unveiled, I'll see would it be worthy to assign older movies to PVD playlists. Until then, I really need .asx files not to load after every click and play from within PVD. Maybe I'm overlooking something, but please point it to me.
But including the ID in the filename
I was very specific. Folders, not files have IDs in their names. File names consists of only titles, origtitles, year and/or source.
I do use file manager, of course. But, for movies, I use it after PVD, and in previous post I have described how. I'll repeat once again. If you have a 1000 movies on a HDD, for me it's faster and more convenient to type Naked Lunch in PVD, than to use context menu, then to open Explorer and to scroll over like 400 movies to get it. Not to tell that if HDD is unplugged (on a shelf) maybe it's not on "that HDD with those 'N's". How to locate it?
When it's 4572, it can only be on one HDD.
(because the ID's are meaningless without your PVD database)
I wouldn't agree. If you search outside PVD, that means you do
search somehow:
1. By scrolling? But how do you know that Naked Lunch isn't with those Ns on a HDD on a shelf?
2. By using windows, or other search tool? Then, ID in a folder name doesn't bother you, you just type title in the search bar.
And how I make it portable? Export Id-Title-origtitle to a .txt file located on the root of a HDD. I could bet that opening txt with notepad, using ctrl+f is again more convenient, if not faster than any other search tool.
and makes it less likely they would be compatible with other software (e.g., a media manager).
Will you simulate a situation, because I'm not sure what are you talking about?
Everyone who knows me knows me by my name
No one, other than those who know you, care. Let's say you're my guest. I'm out. I know the title, you know the title, I know on which hdd it is ("on that shelf the second one starting with NA, not the first one starting with NA"), and you? But, if it's 3219 it can only be on one HDD
I mean, what is on Earth cataloged with letters?
And finally:
1. It's not about knowing the title, but about
locating the title (speaking of knowing you by your name)
2. You're the "government" of your PVD, and movies are "citizens" of your "PVD country", that's why you have to know their IDs, to manipulate (sic!) and do whatever you want with them