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August 28, 2008 at 8:43 AM #262972August 28, 2008 at 10:56 AM #262727afx114Participant
I used to be anti-iTunes (WinAmp 4 life!), but at some point my library became so big that it was literally impossible to keep track of it all in a nice and orderly fashion. I’m currently at over 18,000 songs (110 GB) and iTunes is the best tool out there for managing such a large library.
The smart playlists feature is really powerful for filtering data (eg: “All songs greater than 2 minutes but less that 8 minutes that have a genre of Alternative that came out in the 1990s that I have rated 4 stars or above that I have listened to less than 3 times, but don’t list anything by band X”).
I like the ease of being able to just import and play.. not having to worry about naming/tagging/filing into folders/getting artwork for everything.
August 28, 2008 at 10:56 AM #262933afx114ParticipantI used to be anti-iTunes (WinAmp 4 life!), but at some point my library became so big that it was literally impossible to keep track of it all in a nice and orderly fashion. I’m currently at over 18,000 songs (110 GB) and iTunes is the best tool out there for managing such a large library.
The smart playlists feature is really powerful for filtering data (eg: “All songs greater than 2 minutes but less that 8 minutes that have a genre of Alternative that came out in the 1990s that I have rated 4 stars or above that I have listened to less than 3 times, but don’t list anything by band X”).
I like the ease of being able to just import and play.. not having to worry about naming/tagging/filing into folders/getting artwork for everything.
August 28, 2008 at 10:56 AM #262939afx114ParticipantI used to be anti-iTunes (WinAmp 4 life!), but at some point my library became so big that it was literally impossible to keep track of it all in a nice and orderly fashion. I’m currently at over 18,000 songs (110 GB) and iTunes is the best tool out there for managing such a large library.
The smart playlists feature is really powerful for filtering data (eg: “All songs greater than 2 minutes but less that 8 minutes that have a genre of Alternative that came out in the 1990s that I have rated 4 stars or above that I have listened to less than 3 times, but don’t list anything by band X”).
I like the ease of being able to just import and play.. not having to worry about naming/tagging/filing into folders/getting artwork for everything.
August 28, 2008 at 10:56 AM #262991afx114ParticipantI used to be anti-iTunes (WinAmp 4 life!), but at some point my library became so big that it was literally impossible to keep track of it all in a nice and orderly fashion. I’m currently at over 18,000 songs (110 GB) and iTunes is the best tool out there for managing such a large library.
The smart playlists feature is really powerful for filtering data (eg: “All songs greater than 2 minutes but less that 8 minutes that have a genre of Alternative that came out in the 1990s that I have rated 4 stars or above that I have listened to less than 3 times, but don’t list anything by band X”).
I like the ease of being able to just import and play.. not having to worry about naming/tagging/filing into folders/getting artwork for everything.
August 28, 2008 at 10:56 AM #263028afx114ParticipantI used to be anti-iTunes (WinAmp 4 life!), but at some point my library became so big that it was literally impossible to keep track of it all in a nice and orderly fashion. I’m currently at over 18,000 songs (110 GB) and iTunes is the best tool out there for managing such a large library.
The smart playlists feature is really powerful for filtering data (eg: “All songs greater than 2 minutes but less that 8 minutes that have a genre of Alternative that came out in the 1990s that I have rated 4 stars or above that I have listened to less than 3 times, but don’t list anything by band X”).
I like the ease of being able to just import and play.. not having to worry about naming/tagging/filing into folders/getting artwork for everything.
August 28, 2008 at 2:01 PM #262761DaverzParticipantIf you do get a Mac and plan to use it heavily (e.g. bringing it to work everyday), I’d suggest getting Applecare. It will easily pay for itself the first time you have a hardware problem. Applecare is one of the few extended warranties that Consumer Reports considers worthwhile.
One thing I really like about Macs is how easy it is to connect to things in a network environment, particularly a mixed unix/windows environment. They really try harder here and can connect to pretty much everything.
August 28, 2008 at 2:01 PM #262968DaverzParticipantIf you do get a Mac and plan to use it heavily (e.g. bringing it to work everyday), I’d suggest getting Applecare. It will easily pay for itself the first time you have a hardware problem. Applecare is one of the few extended warranties that Consumer Reports considers worthwhile.
One thing I really like about Macs is how easy it is to connect to things in a network environment, particularly a mixed unix/windows environment. They really try harder here and can connect to pretty much everything.
August 28, 2008 at 2:01 PM #262974DaverzParticipantIf you do get a Mac and plan to use it heavily (e.g. bringing it to work everyday), I’d suggest getting Applecare. It will easily pay for itself the first time you have a hardware problem. Applecare is one of the few extended warranties that Consumer Reports considers worthwhile.
One thing I really like about Macs is how easy it is to connect to things in a network environment, particularly a mixed unix/windows environment. They really try harder here and can connect to pretty much everything.
August 28, 2008 at 2:01 PM #263026DaverzParticipantIf you do get a Mac and plan to use it heavily (e.g. bringing it to work everyday), I’d suggest getting Applecare. It will easily pay for itself the first time you have a hardware problem. Applecare is one of the few extended warranties that Consumer Reports considers worthwhile.
One thing I really like about Macs is how easy it is to connect to things in a network environment, particularly a mixed unix/windows environment. They really try harder here and can connect to pretty much everything.
August 28, 2008 at 2:01 PM #263062DaverzParticipantIf you do get a Mac and plan to use it heavily (e.g. bringing it to work everyday), I’d suggest getting Applecare. It will easily pay for itself the first time you have a hardware problem. Applecare is one of the few extended warranties that Consumer Reports considers worthwhile.
One thing I really like about Macs is how easy it is to connect to things in a network environment, particularly a mixed unix/windows environment. They really try harder here and can connect to pretty much everything.
August 28, 2008 at 6:10 PM #262816stockstradrParticipant… my library became so big that it was literally impossible to keep track of it all in a nice and orderly fashion. I’m currently at over 18,000 songs (110 GB) and iTunes is the best tool out there for managing such a large library.
My response: I completely agree with above post!
I will refrain from incriminating myself (revealing in a public forum how many mp3 songs I’m managing with iTunes). In any case, I am AMAZED how effortlessly iTunes handles my huge mp3 library. I have many more than 18,000 of mp3 songs!
Here’s what I like about iTunes after already having tried WinAMP, Roxio, Musicmatch Jukebox.
1) iTunes seems to have the biggest most comprehensive online music matching database. Almost every time iTunes finds the correct album and song info for the CD I’ve just popped in for ripping
2) downloadable album artwork from iTunes (resolution, color) album artwork, and a is good quality and pretty comprehensive library
3) More convenient to sort music using front end interface
4) very easy to rip CD’s into mp3’s – but you gotta set it to convert to MP3 instead of the stupid Apple proprietary format.
5) I love the albumflow interface that lets one “spin” through a visual jukebox of your album covers to choose something to play.
6) I love the ability to modify any field of multiple MP3 album/song info at the same time. You can select all songs in 10 different albums and edit any fields all at onceAugust 28, 2008 at 6:10 PM #263022stockstradrParticipant… my library became so big that it was literally impossible to keep track of it all in a nice and orderly fashion. I’m currently at over 18,000 songs (110 GB) and iTunes is the best tool out there for managing such a large library.
My response: I completely agree with above post!
I will refrain from incriminating myself (revealing in a public forum how many mp3 songs I’m managing with iTunes). In any case, I am AMAZED how effortlessly iTunes handles my huge mp3 library. I have many more than 18,000 of mp3 songs!
Here’s what I like about iTunes after already having tried WinAMP, Roxio, Musicmatch Jukebox.
1) iTunes seems to have the biggest most comprehensive online music matching database. Almost every time iTunes finds the correct album and song info for the CD I’ve just popped in for ripping
2) downloadable album artwork from iTunes (resolution, color) album artwork, and a is good quality and pretty comprehensive library
3) More convenient to sort music using front end interface
4) very easy to rip CD’s into mp3’s – but you gotta set it to convert to MP3 instead of the stupid Apple proprietary format.
5) I love the albumflow interface that lets one “spin” through a visual jukebox of your album covers to choose something to play.
6) I love the ability to modify any field of multiple MP3 album/song info at the same time. You can select all songs in 10 different albums and edit any fields all at onceAugust 28, 2008 at 6:10 PM #263029stockstradrParticipant… my library became so big that it was literally impossible to keep track of it all in a nice and orderly fashion. I’m currently at over 18,000 songs (110 GB) and iTunes is the best tool out there for managing such a large library.
My response: I completely agree with above post!
I will refrain from incriminating myself (revealing in a public forum how many mp3 songs I’m managing with iTunes). In any case, I am AMAZED how effortlessly iTunes handles my huge mp3 library. I have many more than 18,000 of mp3 songs!
Here’s what I like about iTunes after already having tried WinAMP, Roxio, Musicmatch Jukebox.
1) iTunes seems to have the biggest most comprehensive online music matching database. Almost every time iTunes finds the correct album and song info for the CD I’ve just popped in for ripping
2) downloadable album artwork from iTunes (resolution, color) album artwork, and a is good quality and pretty comprehensive library
3) More convenient to sort music using front end interface
4) very easy to rip CD’s into mp3’s – but you gotta set it to convert to MP3 instead of the stupid Apple proprietary format.
5) I love the albumflow interface that lets one “spin” through a visual jukebox of your album covers to choose something to play.
6) I love the ability to modify any field of multiple MP3 album/song info at the same time. You can select all songs in 10 different albums and edit any fields all at onceAugust 28, 2008 at 6:10 PM #263081stockstradrParticipant… my library became so big that it was literally impossible to keep track of it all in a nice and orderly fashion. I’m currently at over 18,000 songs (110 GB) and iTunes is the best tool out there for managing such a large library.
My response: I completely agree with above post!
I will refrain from incriminating myself (revealing in a public forum how many mp3 songs I’m managing with iTunes). In any case, I am AMAZED how effortlessly iTunes handles my huge mp3 library. I have many more than 18,000 of mp3 songs!
Here’s what I like about iTunes after already having tried WinAMP, Roxio, Musicmatch Jukebox.
1) iTunes seems to have the biggest most comprehensive online music matching database. Almost every time iTunes finds the correct album and song info for the CD I’ve just popped in for ripping
2) downloadable album artwork from iTunes (resolution, color) album artwork, and a is good quality and pretty comprehensive library
3) More convenient to sort music using front end interface
4) very easy to rip CD’s into mp3’s – but you gotta set it to convert to MP3 instead of the stupid Apple proprietary format.
5) I love the albumflow interface that lets one “spin” through a visual jukebox of your album covers to choose something to play.
6) I love the ability to modify any field of multiple MP3 album/song info at the same time. You can select all songs in 10 different albums and edit any fields all at once -
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