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My Model S is scheduled for delivery next week and I'm planning to use the USB-drive music feature without, I hope, having to take extra steps to have the music play in album order. BTW, be very cautious with 'free' downloadable utility programs. Read reviews and buy the best USB drives for music from top brands, including Samsung, SanDisk, Patriot and more. The 7 Best USB Flash Drives to Store Music in 2019 Share Pin Email Print Web & Search. Best of the Web Search Engines. Which means you should be able to store more than 32,000 songs on the device.

Most USB storage devices use the FAT file system. This includes pen drives, and MP3 players. There's nothing wrong with FAT, and it's ideally suited to removable devices because, unlike NTFS, there's no cacheing of data happening behind the scenes.

So there's less chance of losing information if you unplug your device at the wrong time. But the FAT file system doesn't sort files in alphabetical order. So, unless you access the device via a system that does, the order in which the files are displayed becomes ever more random as you continually copy files to it, delete them, or rename them. The problem doesn't show up in Windows, because the OS sorts filenames before it displays the contents of the device. But try a directory listing from a command prompt, and it's a different story. As is using the device in an MP3 player and expecting the tracks to play in order. If this is a problem for you, the solution is to simply find a utility that can sort the contents of the drive for you.

And one great such utility is called FAT Sorter. It's free, it runs on Windows XP and above, and you can get it from. It's only a 0.4 MB download, but you'll also need.NT 3.5 if you don't already have it. My thanks to site user Keith for this recommendation.

Os x vlc player download. Apparently his daughter is using it to sort out her MP3 files and is very impressed! Please rate this article.

When the MP3 songs on your flash drive play in alphabetical order, it can be for different reasons. In some cases, it's a feature of your car stereo or other music player, and there's not much you can do about it except rename the song files. On many music players, however, the MP3 song order is determined by the order in which you saved the files to the flash drive.

To make sure your computer writes the songs to the drive in the correct order, first create a playlist of the songs in iTunes or Windows Media Player.