Night Transit Workflow

DJ Prep

Browser-based DJ preparation desk

Clean tracks, stage cues, and export a tighter crate before the set starts.

DJ Prep turns the original repository into a public-facing workflow site. Upload tracks, estimate tempo in the browser, clean noisy filenames, shape hot cues, import Rekordbox XML, and export a usable prep file without wrestling with a cluttered desktop routine.

Prep actions

5

Upload, clean, estimate, cue, and export in one continuous pass.

Browser-first

Local

This release keeps the experience lightweight and fast for first-time visitors.

Export posture

XML

Prepare a structured handoff for Rekordbox-centered workflows.

DJ workstation with BPM screens and mixer lighting

Live prep posture

From rough files to set-ready structure

Smart cleanup
Tempo estimate
Rekordbox-style export

Current crate

Track workspace

Drop in a few tracks to start the session.

Upload audio files for local analysis, import an existing Rekordbox XML crate, or load the built-in demo to test the workflow immediately.

Workflow logic

A calmer path from incoming files to exported structure.

The website keeps the most legible parts of the original repository intact for public use. Instead of hiding everything behind a local stack, it presents a clear sequence that DJs can understand on arrival and act on immediately.

Clean titles fast

Strip download-site noise, normalize artist-title formatting, and get a cleaner crate before you ever open Rekordbox.

Estimate tempo in-browser

Use browser-side audio decoding to generate a quick BPM estimate, then refine the values manually when you need precision.

Stage cue structure

Build a six-point cue layout that gives every track a usable structure for intros, drops, resets, and exits.

Export a usable XML

Send the session out as a Rekordbox-style XML file so your prep work stays portable and organized.

Abstract waveform and beat-grid illustration

Signal view

The interface looks like a workflow tool, not a generic upload form.

The visual system borrows from waveform overlays, hardware indicator lights, and transit-style directionality. That gives the public site a clear brand identity while reinforcing the core promise of precision and preparation.

Desk setup representing metadata cleanup and music library organization

Metadata craft

Cut noise before it reaches the library.

Clean artist and title fields quickly, keep the crate readable, and reduce repetitive edits inside later software.

Editorial graphic representing confident XML export workflow

Export confidence

Keep the handoff structured.

XML export remains central because DJs need a portable bridge from preparation time to performance software.

Launch note

Monetization should stay out of the critical workflow.

This site is being shaped for ad approval readiness, but the product surface still comes first. When monetization is activated after approval, ad placements should live around explanatory content and resource areas, not inside the upload, editing, or export controls.

FAQ

What visitors need to know before they trust the tool.

Does this website upload my tracks to a remote server?

In this browser-first release, the workflow is designed around local browser processing for the interactive prep desk. Visitors should still review the privacy page for current policy details.

Is the BPM estimate final?

It is a quick local estimate intended to speed up prep. DJs should review and adjust values when precision matters for live mixing.

Can I bring in an existing Rekordbox XML collection?

Yes. The workspace supports XML import so returning users can reshape cue timing and metadata before exporting again.

Will advertising interrupt the tool itself?

The monetization plan keeps ads away from the core upload, edit, and export flow. Approval readiness and live ad rendering are treated as separate states.