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Music notation format used by Finale and other MakeMusic notation programs; saves data in MIDI format, similar to a .MID file; also contains additional information that can only be read by MakeMusic software.
MUS files may be plain audio stored in the Ogg Vorbis (.OGG) format, or they may use encryption that cannot be read by standard audio players. A Java tool called muscode.jar can be used to convert Minecraft MUS files to the OGG format.
Audio file used by Electronic Arts games for the PlayStation 2 (PS2), PlayStation 3 (PS3), and PC; saves audio data for the game soundtrack and used for playing background music; often used by the Need For Speed series games.
Audio file used by Doom and other games written with the original Doom engine; similar to a MIDI file but is limited by 9 channels and a file size of 65KB; used as a compact format for playing simple sound tracks during the game.
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With Finale Notepad, you can create orchestrations of up to eight staves. You can add notes by clicking them into the staff or importing MIDI or MusicXML files. Once your music is in NotePad, you can hear it play back, see it on the printed page, and share it with other NotePad users and users of other Finale family music notation software.
With Finale NotePad you can print professional-quality sheet music and exchange your NotePad creations to collaborate with fellow NotePad and Finale users. You can also share MIDI and MusicXML files, back and forth, with users of hundreds of other music programs.
An ever-increasing number of sites make downloadable sheet music available in either MusicXML format or original source file file formats that can be converted to MusicXML. Here is a selected listing of sites where you can download sheet music in MusicXML or compatible formats.
Musescore.comThis site offers downloads of over 1.5 million score files in MuseScore, MusicXML, PDF, MIDI, and MP3 formats. Public domain scores can be downloaded free of charge. Downloading copyrighted scores requires a Musescore PRO subscription for $49/year.
IMSLP Petrucci Music LibraryIMSLP, the International Music Score Library Project, has one of the largest collection of online public domain scores in the Petrucci Music Library, with over 210,000 works. IMSLP provides files in PDF format, but an increasing number of these PDF files include MusicXML attachments.
Choral Public Domain LibraryThe library has over 43,000 choral and vocal public domain scores available. An increasing number are available directly in MusicXML format. Many others are available in source file formats (Finale, Sibelius, capella, Myriad, etc.) that can be exported to MusicXML files.
Werner Icking Music ArchiveThis site has many free sheet music files. While many are in PDF format only, an increasing number are in MusicXML format or MusicXML-compatible source formats like Finale and capella. The Archive has since merged with IMSLP, but this original site is still available online.
The Full English Transcription Programme at FolkopediaThe Folkopedia wiki is dedicated to the Folk Arts of England and beyond. The Full English Transcription Programme available on Folkopedia is transcribing the online manuscript collection of The Full English Digital Archive into notation files in MusicXML, PDF, and MIDI formats.
Visaudio DesignsVisaudio Designs provides designs for marching bands and percussion ensembles, including both ready-made and custom shows. The shows include editable notation files in both MusicXML and Sibelius formats.
YourScoreYourScore Music offers downloadable, customizable music for young instrumental groups, designed to address individual learning in an ensemble setting. Purchases include both MusicXML and PDF files, with the MusicXML intended for customizing the arrangement to the needs of the ensemble.
La mà de guidoA music publishing house that specializes in music by Spanish and Catalan composers. They sell music as MusicXML files, as well as PDF files and print publications.
Lusthof der Muziek (in Dutch)The Garden of Musical Delights offers public domain music from Flanders and the Netherlands. The focus is on traditional music, folk music, songbooks, broadsides, dance music, and music of anonymous composers. MusicXML is one of the formats available for download.
LifeWay WorshipThis site sells Christian worship music in a variety of score and audio formats, including full orchestral Finale files. Their SongMap technology allows you to make custom arrangements of both the score and audio files.
1) I have added a song in My music and Downloaded it for offline listening , If i want to delete it, I will have to remove download first and then remove it from my music. If I simply remove it from my music (without removing download), I can see that the file would still exist under storage and eat my iphone space.
Is this how it is done Is it a 2 step process to delete a downloaded song from phone memory and my music Shouldn't simply deleting a song from my music should also delete it form iphone storage Am i missing something here or is this done intentionally
2) The same things happens with playlist. They have a great collection of playlists and most of the time, I download good playlist I come across for offline listening, after listening to them , if I simply go ahead and choose playlist as delete from my music, all the downloads would still be available under storage. Why is that I have to remove the downloads first and then remove playlist.
As far as the first scenario - yeah, the system is not perfect. I know that is not the answer you wanted, but even though 90% of the time that I delete my downloaded music through the Music app, the actual songs will be deleted from my iPhone 6 memory, occasionally they won't. But if it is happening ALL the time, you can try doing a hard reset of the iPhone (holding the HOME and POWER buttons until the Apple logo shows up) and see if that helps. Otherwise there might be an issue with your iPhone.
I however, do not agree with your logic of if '90% of the time offline downloads are deleted when we delete it from my music' then its okay and if that percentage comes down to 40%..20%..or 0% as in my case then 'there is some wrong with my phone'. Either Apple Music has this functionality of downloaded songs deleting itself when removed from Apple Music or it doesn't. I spoke with Apple Support and those guys claim it doesn't have this functionality. Sigh!
For #2, I agree with your logic of 'might prefer to have the playlist remain in their library but not have the physical songs on their devices any longer' but incase a user choose to remove the playlist from my music, the downloads should be deleted as well, automatically , without a 2 step process. Why For the simple reason that if the song doesn't exist in your apple music app, what is the point of keeping a downloaded copy, and wasting storage
I think I misunderstood your first issue. What I was referring to with the 90% comment is that if I have music on my iPhone that I downloaded to listen to offline and then delete the songs from the Music App, 90% of the time or more it will also delete the tracks from my iPhone's memory. I did not realize you meant that if you delete the songs from your library (without first deleting the actual music file), it should be a one step process - delete track and it also deletes the physical file from the iPhone's memory. You would think that should be obvious, but I guess for some reason it isn't handled that way.
* When you are using Windows 7 running on a virtual machine (VM), the QuickTime Player is required to be installed for playing MP4 video files. (Read Download QuickTime for Windows, on the Apple site, for more information.)
PowerPoint may also support additional file types if you install additional codecs on your PC. If you want to learn about finding codecs for your PC, read Are you having playback issues (in PowerPoint)
Certain older video file formats may not compress or export properly in Office on a Windows RT PC. Instead, use modern media formats such as H.264 and Advanced Audio Coding (AAC), which PowerPoint 2013 RT supports. PowerPoint 2010 supports the AAC format if the correct codec (such as ffDShow) is installed. Want to see what version of Office you're using
Windows Media files (.wmv, .wma) aren't supported on PowerPoint for macOS. There are a number of third- party tools for Mac that can convert your .wmv or .wma file to one of the supported formats listed above.
Alternatively, if you have a Microsoft 365 subscription that includes Microsoft Stream, you can upload the .wmv or .wma file to Stream and insert it into your presentation from there. Learn more about Microsoft Stream.
Once you have a converted media file in a suitable format with the correct encoding, go back to the PowerPoint slide where you want to insert your video or audio file. On the Insert tab of the ribbon, click Audio or Video. (For complete details about inserting the media file, see Insert and play a video file from your computer or Add audio to your slides.)
I recently upgraded to an iPhone 6 from an iPhone 4. Today I was playing music on my iPhone that I have purchased through iTunes and everything was fine until I got to one particular song. Whenever I try to play the song, I get a message saying that my Apple Music subscription is expired and I need to turn it on in order to stream this song. I get the same exact message when I try to download the song to play offline on my iPhone. The song plays just fine on my MacBook. I have not run into this issue with any other songs, so I'm perplexed as to why I can't play this one particular song. 1e1e36bf2d