Hello.
I have an iphone, an Ipad , an an Imac, and the music app on each of them has different music.
How can I manage to have the same music in the three, and synchronize among them?
Ditto.
I have a 2 TB library with a tremendous amount of live shows and digital transfers from old LPs of stuff never on CD. All have uploaded to my iCloud library. When playing at home it’s in lossless and on the road high quality AAC.
On 2023-09-05, Lagisbert<jgras1970@gmail.com> wrote:
Hello.
I have an iphone, an Ipad , an an Imac, and the music app on each of them has different music.
How can I manage to have the same music in the three, and synchronize among them?
You could certainly go "old school" and (a) consolidate your music to
the iMac Music library, and then (b) manually sync the iPhone and i{ad
to your Mac. But there's a *much* better way:
I've moved my music library to the cloud by subscribing to iTunes Match
so that all of my music is automatically available on all of my Apple
devices and computers without me having to lift a finger.
iTunes Match
<https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT204146>
I've used iTunes Match for years, and absolutely love it. For only a
couple bucks a month, my entire music library of over 10,000 songs (most
of which were painstakingly imported from a large CD collection) is
available in iCloud. Each of my iOS devices and Macs have access to all
of it. I can play any song in my library at will and it automatically
streams to the device. My songs don’t have to be downloaded to my
devices, which means I have lots more free space on them.
I keep the songs downloaded on my computer where I have lots of free
space. But I don’t even have to do that if I don’t want to. I can just leave them all in the cloud if needed (note, however, that iTunes Match
is not advertised or intended to be a backup service - you should
definitely keep an archive of your own).
I also prepare for flights on planes by downloading artists / albums /
songs / playlists to whatever device(s) I’ll be carrying with me, so I
can listen to them while we are in the air, then just delete them again
when I get home to save space again.
Another really nice benefit of iTunes Match is once your songs are
uploaded to iCloud, you can delete them from your iTunes library and re-download them as pristine high-quality AAC (Advanced Audio Coding - MPEG-4, the successor to MP3) versions of the songs that were matched
from Apple’s catalog with absolutely no DRM attached. That means if you have crappy MP3s, regardless of where they came from, you get to
exchange them for legitimate DRM-free high quality copies. That’s a very nice bonus!
Overall, highly recommended. 😊👍🏼
On 2023-09-20, Tim Lance <not@here.org> wrote:
Ditto.
I have a 2 TB library with a tremendous amount of live shows and digital
transfers from old LPs of stuff never on CD. All have uploaded to my iCloud >> library. When playing at home it’s in lossless and on the road high quality
AAC.
It really is pretty nice.
Back in the 90s, some friends and I considered the idea of a company
that would hold people's music libraries in the cloud and stream it on
demand (we weren't thinking of mobile devices at the time - just
computers), but it would have been cost-prohibitive and much harder to
set up back then. For obvious reasons, Apple had all the money and
resources needed to design it right and make it successful. In
comparison, we wouldn't have stood a chance. 🤣
On 2023-09-19 21:49, Jolly Roger wrote:
On 2023-09-20, Tim Lance <not@here.org> wrote:
Ditto.
I have a 2 TB library with a tremendous amount of live shows and digital >>> transfers from old LPs of stuff never on CD. All have uploaded to my iCloud >>> library. When playing at home it’s in lossless and on the road high quality
AAC.
It really is pretty nice.
Back in the 90s, some friends and I considered the idea of a company
that would hold people's music libraries in the cloud and stream it on
demand (we weren't thinking of mobile devices at the time - just
computers), but it would have been cost-prohibitive and much harder to
set up back then. For obvious reasons, Apple had all the money and
resources needed to design it right and make it successful. In
comparison, we wouldn't have stood a chance. 🤣
If you had taken the risk, borrowed OPM, built up a core that was
functional and reliable, Apple (or other(s)) may have well bought you
out at handsome (FE) premium.
On Sep 20, 2023 at 10:10:38 AM PDT, "Alan Browne" <bitbucket@blackhole.com> wrote:
On 2023-09-19 21:49, Jolly Roger wrote:
On 2023-09-20, Tim Lance <not@here.org> wrote:
Ditto.
I have a 2 TB library with a tremendous amount of live shows and digital >>>> transfers from old LPs of stuff never on CD. All have uploaded to my iCloud
library. When playing at home it’s in lossless and on the road high quality
AAC.
It really is pretty nice.
Back in the 90s, some friends and I considered the idea of a company
that would hold people's music libraries in the cloud and stream it on
demand (we weren't thinking of mobile devices at the time - just
computers), but it would have been cost-prohibitive and much harder to
set up back then. For obvious reasons, Apple had all the money and
resources needed to design it right and make it successful. In
comparison, we wouldn't have stood a chance. 🤣
If you had taken the risk, borrowed OPM, built up a core that was
functional and reliable, Apple (or other(s)) may have well bought you
out at handsome (FE) premium.
That worked out well for guys at the classical music enterprise Primephonic, which became Apple's Classical.app released earlier this year. Sadly, it's only available on the iPhone and iPad, and the iPad version, even in IOS 17, is still the iPhone program taking up a small rectangle in the middle of the iPad screen. Especially for Apple it seems strange they still have updated it to at least observe the screen size.
As for sharing across devices, it took many days before I got 92k of tunes on iCloud. I'm still inching forward and now have ~97k. I understand it is limited to 100k. Doing searches in Music.app, even on my new mac (Mac Mini M2 Pro), typing searches is still slowed to a crawl.
On 2023-09-19 21:49, Jolly Roger wrote:
On 2023-09-20, Tim Lance <not@here.org> wrote:
Ditto.
I have a 2 TB library with a tremendous amount of live shows and digital >>> transfers from old LPs of stuff never on CD. All have uploaded to my iCloud >>> library. When playing at home it’s in lossless and on the road high quality
AAC.
It really is pretty nice.
Back in the 90s, some friends and I considered the idea of a company
that would hold people's music libraries in the cloud and stream it on
demand (we weren't thinking of mobile devices at the time - just
computers), but it would have been cost-prohibitive and much harder to
set up back then. For obvious reasons, Apple had all the money and
resources needed to design it right and make it successful. In
comparison, we wouldn't have stood a chance. 🤣
If you had taken the risk, borrowed OPM, built up a core that was
functional and reliable, Apple (or other(s)) may have well bought you
out at handsome (FE) premium.
On 2023-09-20, Tim Lance<not@here.org> wrote:
Ditto.
I have a 2 TB library with a tremendous amount of live shows and digital transfers from old LPs of stuff never on CD. All have uploaded to my iCloud library. When playing at home it’s in lossless and on the road high quality
AAC.
It really is pretty nice.
Back in the 90s, some friends and I considered the idea of a company
that would hold people's music libraries in the cloud and stream it on
demand (we weren't thinking of mobile devices at the time - just
computers), but it would have been cost-prohibitive and much harder to
set up back then. For obvious reasons, Apple had all the money and
resources needed to design it right and make it successful. In
comparison, we wouldn't have stood a chance. 🤣
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