Glossary
Add to Library
is in the context of kJams means to add songs that already exist on a hard drive, ie: they were ripped by some other software, or previously ripped with kJams but then moved or you decided to rebuild your library after consolidating it. This is NOT the same thing as Ripping.
Artwork Panel
The place in the corner where you can see album art, singer photo, or a mini lyrics window (see Screen Shots
Burn
To create a new CD, CD+G, VCD or DVD from music or video files that were originally on your computer. This new disc can then be played in any player that can play that type of disc. For example, you might "burn" a CD+G disc that contains your 14 favorite songs, then you can bring that disc out with you when you go to a venue for Karaoke, give the disc to the KJ and sing all your favorite songs.
CD Info.cidb
This is the file used by iTunes to inform the finder what to display for CD track names. The format is discussed in the article CD Info.cidb.
Copy
to "copy" a file means you have the file already existing on a hard drive, and you are making a second copy of the same file, somewhere else on that same hard drive, or on another local hard drive. it *can* also mean copying over a network, if said network is local and you're using the Finder or "Windows Explorer" to do that copy.
Download
To transfer a file, usually over the internet, from a remote server or device to the machine you're controlling, typically the computer physically in front of you. You are "pulling" the file to the one you're controlling from a remote device. This is NOT the same as "Rip" (or copy, for that matter) See "Glossary#Upload" for further elucidation.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions. By convention this implies that the answers are also given.
Import
In the context of kJams you should never say "import" as it is not precise enough. Please use the word "Rip" or the term "Add to Library", because they mean very different things.
LCD
See LCD Panel
Messenger
See Messenger
Meta data
Information about something. In this context, it is the various data associated with songs and can include just about anything you can imagine. In addition to name, artist, album, you can have things such as Label Color, Beats per Minute, Composer, even Lyrics. In kJams, essential meta data is stored in tags right in the song file, and is duplicated in the database for efficient access. Non essential meta data is stored in a file next to the song file, in an text XML file in the "plist" format. See: Perfect Metadata, Meta Data Files, Meta Info.
Playhead
See LCD Panel
Rip, Ripping
To copy music and/or video off a CD, CD+G, VCD, DVD. In this context it may also include LaserDisc. This generally involves translating the format of the data as well, eg: the data on a music CD is written in a raw, uncompressed format called "PCM", but when you rip it into a file on your disk drive, it may be written in "MP3" format. This is NOT the same as "Add To Library". It *is* a form of "format shifting", which is (currently) perfectly legal.
Scrub
An mouse action denoting dragging the Playhead across the timeline track. See LCD Panel
Tag
When a song is stored on a computer, it is stored in a particular "format". That format may be AAC, MP3, Vorbis, QuickTime (which has many sub-formats), or any of a dozen other formats. Each format usually has a "tagging scheme" that manages the meta data for the song. For example, the MP3 format uses a tagging scheme called "ID3", and Vorbis uses a tagging scheme called "Vorbis Comments". Tags almost always include "Name", "Artist", "Album", "Track Number", and "Genre". Tags are stored directly inside the song file itself, so when you copy the song to another computer, the tags of course go with the song.
Upload
To transfer a file, usually over the internet, from the computer you are controlling, typically your local machine, to a different computer, server or device, typically remote server. You are "pushing" the file to up to it's destination, like when you "upload" a photo to Flickr.
You typically "control" the computer that is physically sitting in front of you, but this distinction is subtle. You may instead do a screen share where you control a computer down the street, and, controlling it's screen, cause a connection from that remote computer back to the computer that is physically in front of you, and then send a file: this is still an upload even tho the file is traveling FROM a remote computer to the one in front of you.
Wiki
This is a Hawai'ian word meaning "quick". It is also the name of the software used to run the kJams web site and manage all this documentation. More info here.