How To Move the iTunes Library to a Home Server while Keeping its Underlying Media Structure Intact
Categories: gadgets • geek • how-to • iPhone • interactive media • software
Tags: appletv • drobo • ipod • itunes • music library • podcasts
Is the size of your iTunes music library starting to overwhelm your C: drive? Do you want to make your iTunes music library available to more than one PC over a network?
This post is about how to move all the files in your iTunes Music Library (including music, podcasts, videos, TV shows and audio books) from your PC’s drive to a network drive (or another drive on the same PC) while retaining both: (i) the integrity of the underlying file names and organization structures; and (ii) playlists, play counts, ratings etc.
This post is for the gear-head types like myself. Those that have spent time ‘under the hood’ organizing their music the way they want - naming the underlying files with names of their choice, organizing the files into directories of their choice, etc.
If you are like most people and let iTunes do its own thing (ie: let iTunes handle file naming and organization), this post is not for you. There are much easier ways to move your files if you let iTunes do this it’s way. See, for example, here, here and here.
Background
First PMP - The Creative Nomad: My first portable music player was a 32 Meg (yes, Meg, not Gig) Creative Nomad. I organized my music at that time with Windows Media player (‘WMP’).
Dale’s Early Music Organization: Over the years, I spent an enormous amount of time and energy ripping songs from my DVDs, keeping my underlying music library file names, file organization/directory structures and meta data pristine. All the files were contained under my C:\Files\MP3 hierarchy, making it very easy to back up my media from time to time by simply backing up that directory.
How to Set Podcasts to Auto Delete From Your iPod
Categories: gadgets • how-to • interactive media
Tags: appletv • auto delete • ipod • itunes • podcasts • video podcasts
I’m writing this in the event there are avid iPod/iTunes podcast users that, like me, didn’t know they can set iTunes to auto-delete podcasts after they have finished with them.
I listen to/watch anywhere from 2 to 10 podcasts every day. For years it has been a pet peeve of mine that I had to use iTunes to manually delete podcasts that I have listend to/watched in order to delete them from the iPod. I couldn’t understand why Apple didn’t provide an option on the iPod to delete podcasts I was finished with.
Turns out that unbeknownst to me, auto-podcast-delete functionality has been there for quite some time - just not how I expected. iTunes has had a function to do exactly what I wanted it to do - auto delete podcasts when finished - since version 4.9.
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