Sunday, May 23, 2010

Multiple Tracks in iTunes Library

Had a phone cal from one of our photo scanning clients - can we help them with an iTunes problem?

So on Friday I went over to survey the situation. Looking at their iTunes library was first step, which explained a lot to the client because as a Sonos user that was the way he looked at his music. Immediately you could see he had three copies of each track.

His first question was why? Well, if you set in Preferences / Advanced that you have a tick in the box for copying music into your iTunes library, when you go through the loop of adding to the library (File / Adder Folder) this is what happens. Even if that track is in the folder already, another copy will be made and added to the original folder. You get from one to two copies. Do it again, even if you're not sure what you were hoping to achieve, you'll get another set of tracks - your third.

Second question, how do we correct this? The only way is the tedious one. Hit show duplicates, then grind through the duplicated items and delete them. Took me hours, but eventually done. That's the exciting side of being a cd ripping service.

Wednesday, May 12, 2010

What's with Apple TV?

Not so long ago Apple described their network to TV bridge device - Apple TV - as a "hobby"device. Rather cruel I thought, even though on the scale of iPads and iPhones this hasn't been a roaring success, at least in sales terms. You have to admit some Apple products are cursed by being ahead of their time and I'm wondering if the time has come for Apple TV.

Many moons ago, when we got married, we inherited an old TV set. I bet the speaker inside cost less than 50p. Dreadful. Have you seen today's TVs? The sound from a new set is brilliant in comparison and many sport multi speaker surround sound systems to compete with cinemas. So what could be more natural than to pump your music via iTunes into your living room via a compact device such as Apple TV. Several of our CD ripping clients use Apple TV for this and are very happy with it. If you think coverflow looks good on your iPod Touch wait till you see it on a top-flight plasma screen.

Our other venture in analogue to digital media conversions, our photo scanning service 1Scan, is also recommending Apple TV. Trust me, your holiday photos or your old family image library will look great blown up on screen. But you also get an automatic facility to turn static images into a rolling slideshow.

The interface that drives Apple TV from your computer is iTunes, a program familiar to so many people now. And it runs faultlessly on Mac and Windows. Apple TV will play nicely with your home wireless network although if you must you can drive it via ethernet. In typical Apple fashion (forgive the pun) it looks cool in its nice white box, makes no noise although I have noticed they can get very hot.

Look great, sounds great, networks nicely and is reasonably priced. What's not to like about Apple TV?

Sunday, May 09, 2010

iTunes Live

I love a conspiracy theory, so much so I think I am tempted to make one up. Apple has apparently trademarked the term "iTunes Live". But they haven't explained what Apple Live will be, so let's speculate.

Apple have been supporting live music sessions in their various stores. Perhaps they'll record them and make them available via iTunes. Or ...

It may be functionality to enable web content to be fed to iTunes and / or your iPod or iPhone. A kind of music streaming service, in real time.

Of course it might be the re-emergence of the music streaming service Lala that Apple bought and closed down.

Or you could add your own guess.

Friday, May 07, 2010

Photos on iPods

Maybe I'm blinkered, natural since in running a CD ripping service we spend so much time doing just that. But iPods aren't just for music - indeed we also operate put a lot of time into scanning photos.

So I noticed with interest a heated discussion among professional photographers on the best way to use an iPod as a portable display device. The modern iPods will store not just music but thousands of images in high quality. Of course the larger screen on the iPod touch lends itself better as a display unit.

I have also seen that a software company is launching a service to host photos for professionals, with the added dimension of an iPhone application. This would both help the photographer when in front of potential clients, but would also allow prospects and clients to download their own version so they can access the snappers work. What price the iPad in this environment?