I purchased that ivolume and ran it through my itunes. I then installed a new CD and inadvertently ran ivolume again. It went through all of itunes and I noticed it was making adjustments on previous adjustments. Why would it do that?
It's up to the user to create additional "groups" (on the left side), and
move tracks that are already tweaked
out of the
Default group. [the Default group cannot be deleted, and that's where newly added songs will appear.]
For example, i created the following groups in my setup:
mp3 done
m4p done
m4p UNTWEAKED
m4a done
adjustments[obviously those were tailored to my personal workflow... create whatever works best for you.]
The idea is this: once iVolume has tweaked a bunch of tracks,
drag them out of the Default group into whatever group you feel they best belong. The next time you rip a CD or download music from iTunes, only those
new tracks will show up in the Default group [where they can be processed via the Start button.]
Note to all: through no fault of iVolume, protected music (.m4p) cannot be auto-tweaked by iVolume. But... we can still do those manually by mousing the slider in iVolume.
Also note: each group can have
its own prefs as far as how iVolume behaves (with respect to the Start button and/or manual adjustment ability, etc). It may seem confusing at first... but that complexity is the price of maximum flexibility.
Is there a way of reversing the whole procedure?
No way. [and -- as far as i'm concerned -- no need.]
Question: The sliders to the right of each itune are either plus or minus. Does an increased plus sign denote a higher sound?
Yes. Even for negative numbers.
E.g., -3db is louder than -9db.