2014-12-04, 09:32
Did you enable "Use local files" when running AD? Although this option assumes you have single movies per folder as that's all AD supports with this option enabled (AD will make a mess of your movies if you use this option and have multiple movies per folder).
You could read the discussion with djhifi immediately prior to yours to discover a method for viewing your media library metadata, which would answer your last two questions.
As for getting your locally saved artwork added to your movies, you've got two options: 1) use AD (it does work if you've organised your library how AD likes it organised and named all your artwork correctly, plus enabled the use local files option), or 2) if you're capable of running a script see the thread in my sig and read about the mklocal.py script (just discussed in the last 2-3 pages) - mklocal.py is a lot more flexible than AD (but not click-click easy - it's a script) when you just want to associate existing local artwork with your movies.
You could read the discussion with djhifi immediately prior to yours to discover a method for viewing your media library metadata, which would answer your last two questions.
As for getting your locally saved artwork added to your movies, you've got two options: 1) use AD (it does work if you've organised your library how AD likes it organised and named all your artwork correctly, plus enabled the use local files option), or 2) if you're capable of running a script see the thread in my sig and read about the mklocal.py script (just discussed in the last 2-3 pages) - mklocal.py is a lot more flexible than AD (but not click-click easy - it's a script) when you just want to associate existing local artwork with your movies.