At this point, however, it’s got the catalog depth, but it doesn’t have basically anything else to take a run at Discogs you can log your collection in VinylWall, but there aren’t any cover images, and you don’t even have to specify what edition you own. VinylWall : I assume in the wildest dreams of the creator of VinylWall, they will challenge Discogs for vinyl logging supremacy. Recommended only if you want to create a database of your records and don’t want to be beholden to the corporate overlords at Discogs. They don’t have Discogs integration, so these won’t help you value your records, or determine which of the 14 trillion pressings of Abbey Road you own. MusicBuddy and Music Collector : These two are free, which is tight, but both of them are basically just database creation tools on your phone. But I tried out five vinyl collection management apps this week anyway, and here’s what I learned about them. None of them do what I really want: an app that can catalog my records without me doing any work other than snapping a pic. As many of you noted on Twitter, it turns out something similar to that exists: there are multiple apps that have barcode scanners and Discogs integration. After spending 18 hours logging my records, I begged for Discogs to make an app that would allow me to snap a pic of my records and be able to determine what edition of the album I owned. Last week, I wrote an article about putting my 850-something piece record collection into Discogs for the first time.
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