if they for some reason want to update to Catalina. If you read my complete comment, (it's not that long), you'd see that I mentioned that the OP should be able to continue using their iTunes playlists. And that's just MY OPINION - your are entitled to yours. Yes, newer versions of iTunes aren't as user friendly as older versions but that's the way it is with a lot of software. There are a lot of people who like and use iTunes, just like there are a lot of people who like and use Ableton, etc, etc. You iDevices (iPods, iPhone and iPads) are updated through the finder and show up in the sidebar when connected, just like a Hard Drive would.Īs usual, commenting for the sake of commenting without adding any substance. Now there has been some problems with some DJ software that accessed the iTunes library with XML Library exports, and they no longer work because the library database files are different now. The Music app looks and acts just like iTunes used to. I have a dedicated Mac Mini for my media server and updated it to Catalina and had no problems at all. So sad after over 20 years of using them.Īpple is NOT scrapping iTunes, they are REPLACING it with "Music", a new app dedicated to just music, and not music, videos, and podcast like iTunes was. I think I'm finally going to give up on Macs next time I buy a new computer. I basically want an equivalent to the very early versions of iTunes. Now they are scrapping it, what would be a good alternative? I use it to convert AIFF to mp3 and I make lots of playlists to try out running orders for albums and EPs. Upload software on my second compyooter - I only actually streamed directly to Live365, never uploaded a music library like most did -was all IĪnyway, that's the major sound software on this compyooter that you probably don't find on anybody else's workstation on this board, so though I'd share.Nuromantix wrote:I use itunes a lot to organise my own recordings. But for me, that - plus the Orban processing and online encoding software, and Live365's Music log into the actual station's audition system elsewhere. Music Director, to listen to an "audition" version of his playlist, to hear how his music mix would sound in a remote location, before porting the Perfectly automated as it is.and, the player wasn't even designed to be a full automation system per se: it was just intended for use to a station's So, while I could literally take live control of the station at any time (or at least could, when the Shure mic was hooked-up), it runs the station just Players simultaneously, each event loaded into the next-playable component.all live at the same time! (including over 1800 music tracks, and 1500 voicetracks of deejay announcements, song introductions, and "station-announcer" tracks).but it alsoĬontains "M-Player", it's own proprietary player that, as long as there is a music log generated within the current date, will automatically begin playingĪn entire day's playlist, including announcer tracks, station-announcer slogans, and ID's all designed to segue according to the shorter lengthsĪs detailed in the database entries, so the previous track can fade out while the next one triggers: the player is essentially designed to emulate three Not only databases, schedules and edits music logs, and carries separate database entries of every sound file which I have backed-up on Drive D, (oh yeah, and Windows Media Player and dBpoweramp have one, too.)Īlso, MusicMaster, a radio-industry-strength music scheduling system suite that I used to run my online radio station with, on my other compyooter: Nero12 Quik Burn Express Essentials (uhhh, not so essential) Windows Media Player (that's right, I'm still on Win7 64 Pro on this machine! ) The mixer interface for my Echo Gina 3g card Adobe Audition 3.0 (NO Sony, I am NOT interested in giving you and your troll on the so-called "Support" site a DIME of monthly income for a program you've been unwilling to support for fifteen years, despite my paying full price for it)ĭBpoweramp, the whole suite upgrade from last month.including PerfecTUNESĬreative Zen Micro (old mp3 player), and its' "Jukebox driver"
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