I liked iTunes database syncing model. Sometimes I think I'm the only one who liked it on its own merits. I had way too much music in the iPod days and found it useful to set up sync rules rather than drag stuff on and off. It took a little more thought but it made my usage possible, which it wasn't before.
Now everything lives is some kind of nebulous cloud database so you don't have to drag files or setup sync rules. Not gonna pretend that's not an improvement in every sense.
Nah there are a lot of people who liked it.
Even as tech minded and DIY as I am, every time someone extolls the merits of self-managed folders filled with their MP3s and synching to the player like it were a flash drive as some kind of a good thing compared to what itunes (and later Zune) did I just don't get it. Purposefully making your life harder to be in control of something that in no way needs you in control of it is just the peak of wasted energy.
I don't think I know what you mean by making my life harder
I literally just dragged a box over my music folder, copied, went to the E:/MP3PLAYERNAMEHERE drive, and pasted
+6
Options
OnTheLastCastlelet's keep it haimish for the peripateticRegistered Userregular
I liked iTunes database syncing model. Sometimes I think I'm the only one who liked it on its own merits. I had way too much music in the iPod days and found it useful to set up sync rules rather than drag stuff on and off. It took a little more thought but it made my usage possible, which it wasn't before.
Now everything lives is some kind of nebulous cloud database so you don't have to drag files or setup sync rules. Not gonna pretend that's not an improvement in every sense.
Nah there are a lot of people who liked it.
Even as tech minded and DIY as I am, every time someone extolls the merits of self-managed folders filled with their MP3s and synching to the player like it were a flash drive as some kind of a good thing compared to what itunes (and later Zune) did I just don't get it. Purposefully making your life harder to be in control of something that in no way needs you in control of it is just the peak of wasted energy.
I don't think I know what you mean by making my life harder
I literally just dragged a box over my music folder, copied, went to the E:/MP3PLAYERNAMEHERE drive, and pasted
agree with choco. it is so much more complicated to get stuff on my iphone than it is on any other mp3 player i've ever had.
+2
Options
ShivahnUnaware of her barrel shifter privilegeWestern coastal temptressRegistered User, Moderatormod
Having the Kinect plugged in and listening for the "Xbox On" command adds about 1W of additional power draw to the "Instant On" mode, in our tests. You can also turn this off in Power Save setting menu. Interestingly, that power draw jumps to about 22 or 23 Watts for a few seconds every time the Kinect hears you say the word "Xbox," even if you don't follow it with "On." If you end up talking about the Xbox a lot in your living room, this could end up costing you a small amount of money on your power bill!
I liked iTunes database syncing model. Sometimes I think I'm the only one who liked it on its own merits. I had way too much music in the iPod days and found it useful to set up sync rules rather than drag stuff on and off. It took a little more thought but it made my usage possible, which it wasn't before.
Now everything lives is some kind of nebulous cloud database so you don't have to drag files or setup sync rules. Not gonna pretend that's not an improvement in every sense.
Nah there are a lot of people who liked it.
Even as tech minded and DIY as I am, every time someone extolls the merits of self-managed folders filled with their MP3s and synching to the player like it were a flash drive as some kind of a good thing compared to what itunes (and later Zune) did I just don't get it. Purposefully making your life harder to be in control of something that in no way needs you in control of it is just the peak of wasted energy.
I don't think I know what you mean by making my life harder
I literally just dragged a box over my music folder, copied, went to the E:/MP3PLAYERNAMEHERE drive, and pasted
Getting iTunes to sync the right stuff, that was "making my life harder"
Abdhyius on
+2
Options
syndalisGetting ClassyOn the WallRegistered User, Loves Apple Productsregular
I liked iTunes database syncing model. Sometimes I think I'm the only one who liked it on its own merits. I had way too much music in the iPod days and found it useful to set up sync rules rather than drag stuff on and off. It took a little more thought but it made my usage possible, which it wasn't before.
Now everything lives is some kind of nebulous cloud database so you don't have to drag files or setup sync rules. Not gonna pretend that's not an improvement in every sense.
Nah there are a lot of people who liked it.
Even as tech minded and DIY as I am, every time someone extolls the merits of self-managed folders filled with their MP3s and synching to the player like it were a flash drive as some kind of a good thing compared to what itunes (and later Zune) did I just don't get it. Purposefully making your life harder to be in control of something that in no way needs you in control of it is just the peak of wasted energy.
I don't think I know what you mean by making my life harder
I literally just dragged a box over my music folder, copied, went to the E:/MP3PLAYERNAMEHERE drive, and pasted
And how did you curate that folder, and the subfolders under it? How did you ID3 Tag your music? How many different tools and how much time was spent getting your music in a state where you could listen to a mix of all of your 90s rock or whatever?
SW-4158-3990-6116
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
I liked iTunes database syncing model. Sometimes I think I'm the only one who liked it on its own merits. I had way too much music in the iPod days and found it useful to set up sync rules rather than drag stuff on and off. It took a little more thought but it made my usage possible, which it wasn't before.
Now everything lives is some kind of nebulous cloud database so you don't have to drag files or setup sync rules. Not gonna pretend that's not an improvement in every sense.
Nah there are a lot of people who liked it.
Even as tech minded and DIY as I am, every time someone extolls the merits of self-managed folders filled with their MP3s and synching to the player like it were a flash drive as some kind of a good thing compared to what itunes (and later Zune) did I just don't get it. Purposefully making your life harder to be in control of something that in no way needs you in control of it is just the peak of wasted energy.
I don't think I know what you mean by making my life harder
I literally just dragged a box over my music folder, copied, went to the E:/MP3PLAYERNAMEHERE drive, and pasted
And how did you curate that folder, and the subfolders under it? How did you ID3 Tag your music? How many different tools and how much time was spent getting your music in a state where you could listen to a mix of all of your 90s rock or whatever?
does osx not have an equivalent of Ctrl clicking to select multiple files for copying at once or something
0
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AManFromEarthLet's get to twerk!The King in the SwampRegistered Userregular
I liked iTunes database syncing model. Sometimes I think I'm the only one who liked it on its own merits. I had way too much music in the iPod days and found it useful to set up sync rules rather than drag stuff on and off. It took a little more thought but it made my usage possible, which it wasn't before.
Now everything lives is some kind of nebulous cloud database so you don't have to drag files or setup sync rules. Not gonna pretend that's not an improvement in every sense.
Nah there are a lot of people who liked it.
Even as tech minded and DIY as I am, every time someone extolls the merits of self-managed folders filled with their MP3s and synching to the player like it were a flash drive as some kind of a good thing compared to what itunes (and later Zune) did I just don't get it. Purposefully making your life harder to be in control of something that in no way needs you in control of it is just the peak of wasted energy.
I don't think I know what you mean by making my life harder
I literally just dragged a box over my music folder, copied, went to the E:/MP3PLAYERNAMEHERE drive, and pasted
And how did you curate that folder, and the subfolders under it? How did you ID3 Tag your music? How many different tools and how much time was spent getting your music in a state where you could listen to a mix of all of your 90s rock or whatever?
does osx not have an equivalent of Ctrl clicking to select multiple files for copying at once or something
Sure it does, it had it before windows.
But that said, what I am asking is not "how did you drag your music onto the device" but rather "how did you get hundreds or thousands of songs cataloged, indexed, tagged, sorted and managed such that you could drag your folders onto the device" and if you were to start rating or sorting the music on the device how do those changes reflect back to the original PC you dragged it from.
SW-4158-3990-6116
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
0
Options
MrMisterJesus dying on the cross in pain? Morally better than us. One has to go "all in".Registered Userregular
I liked iTunes database syncing model. Sometimes I think I'm the only one who liked it on its own merits. I had way too much music in the iPod days and found it useful to set up sync rules rather than drag stuff on and off. It took a little more thought but it made my usage possible, which it wasn't before.
Now everything lives is some kind of nebulous cloud database so you don't have to drag files or setup sync rules. Not gonna pretend that's not an improvement in every sense.
Nah there are a lot of people who liked it.
Even as tech minded and DIY as I am, every time someone extolls the merits of self-managed folders filled with their MP3s and synching to the player like it were a flash drive as some kind of a good thing compared to what itunes (and later Zune) did I just don't get it. Purposefully making your life harder to be in control of something that in no way needs you in control of it is just the peak of wasted energy.
I don't think I know what you mean by making my life harder
I literally just dragged a box over my music folder, copied, went to the E:/MP3PLAYERNAMEHERE drive, and pasted
And how did you curate that folder, and the subfolders under it? How did you ID3 Tag your music? How many different tools and how much time was spent getting your music in a state where you could listen to a mix of all of your 90s rock or whatever?
does osx not have an equivalent of Ctrl clicking to select multiple files for copying at once or something
Sure it does, it had it before windows.
But that said, what I am asking is not "how did you drag your music onto the device" but rather "how did you get hundreds or thousands of songs cataloged, indexed, tagged, sorted and managed such that you could drag your folders onto the device" and if you were to start rating or sorting the music on the device how do those changes reflect back to the original PC you dragged it from.
I liked iTunes database syncing model. Sometimes I think I'm the only one who liked it on its own merits. I had way too much music in the iPod days and found it useful to set up sync rules rather than drag stuff on and off. It took a little more thought but it made my usage possible, which it wasn't before.
Now everything lives is some kind of nebulous cloud database so you don't have to drag files or setup sync rules. Not gonna pretend that's not an improvement in every sense.
Nah there are a lot of people who liked it.
Even as tech minded and DIY as I am, every time someone extolls the merits of self-managed folders filled with their MP3s and synching to the player like it were a flash drive as some kind of a good thing compared to what itunes (and later Zune) did I just don't get it. Purposefully making your life harder to be in control of something that in no way needs you in control of it is just the peak of wasted energy.
I don't think I know what you mean by making my life harder
I literally just dragged a box over my music folder, copied, went to the E:/MP3PLAYERNAMEHERE drive, and pasted
And how did you curate that folder, and the subfolders under it? How did you ID3 Tag your music? How many different tools and how much time was spent getting your music in a state where you could listen to a mix of all of your 90s rock or whatever?
does osx not have an equivalent of Ctrl clicking to select multiple files for copying at once or something
Sure it does, it had it before windows.
But that said, what I am asking is not "how did you drag your music onto the device" but rather "how did you get hundreds or thousands of songs cataloged, indexed, tagged, sorted and managed such that you could drag your folders onto the device" and if you were to start rating or sorting the music on the device how do those changes reflect back to the original PC you dragged it from.
I have never and still to this day do not require or even want my music to be sorted in any way other than by Artist, Album, and Song. Every MP3 player I've ever used including that Creative Zen Nomad was able to parse that information. I have also never wanted to rate my music on the device, or want it to do anything to my PC when I plug it in. You sit there, you eat the MP3s that I put inside of you when I decide that you need more MP3s in you, and then when I want to listen to something I select it.
This is a really silly argument.
+5
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HakkekageSpace Whore Academysumma cum laudeRegistered Userregular
SWOLE PATROLE ASSEMBLE
I did it motherfuckers. 2:26:02 is my official time. I was aiming for 2:30 and am surprised and elated by how well this race went. I felt really good pretty much right up to the end (until the last two miles when i slowed down considerably). Holy shiiii
dis me b4 bein all fuk u i got dis
dis me doin run i totally look liek im havin fun i bet
dis me really close to the finish after i ditched my sweaty jacket by throwing it in Beasto's face and then noticed him snapping a shot. I think i almost hit the girl behind me in the face woops
they give you a baller medal for finishing. fancy as fuk man
Then after Beast and I went to Sushi Palace which lets you order as many sushis as you want until you get full and boy did we eat
it was so gud. gud day. Beast was awesome waking up really early so he could come hold my shit and cheer me on. tired and fatigued a lil but fuggin worth it. those endorphins, man. fuck yesssssss
I liked iTunes database syncing model. Sometimes I think I'm the only one who liked it on its own merits. I had way too much music in the iPod days and found it useful to set up sync rules rather than drag stuff on and off. It took a little more thought but it made my usage possible, which it wasn't before.
Now everything lives is some kind of nebulous cloud database so you don't have to drag files or setup sync rules. Not gonna pretend that's not an improvement in every sense.
Nah there are a lot of people who liked it.
Even as tech minded and DIY as I am, every time someone extolls the merits of self-managed folders filled with their MP3s and synching to the player like it were a flash drive as some kind of a good thing compared to what itunes (and later Zune) did I just don't get it. Purposefully making your life harder to be in control of something that in no way needs you in control of it is just the peak of wasted energy.
It didn't make my life harder. There's the MP3, move it to the player, done. People just want to say "This song, here" and no faff in between.
The actually extra work involved is in managing and structuring your collection so that it's all in the right place, via folders and tags and such. And the thing is, iTunes isn't very good at that either. Fiddling with MP3 info and tags and such via iTunes is a real pain in the ass and like everything, Apple does not play well with others.
+1
Options
Rear Admiral ChocoI wanna be an owl, Jerry!Owl York CityRegistered Userregular
I liked iTunes database syncing model. Sometimes I think I'm the only one who liked it on its own merits. I had way too much music in the iPod days and found it useful to set up sync rules rather than drag stuff on and off. It took a little more thought but it made my usage possible, which it wasn't before.
Now everything lives is some kind of nebulous cloud database so you don't have to drag files or setup sync rules. Not gonna pretend that's not an improvement in every sense.
Nah there are a lot of people who liked it.
Even as tech minded and DIY as I am, every time someone extolls the merits of self-managed folders filled with their MP3s and synching to the player like it were a flash drive as some kind of a good thing compared to what itunes (and later Zune) did I just don't get it. Purposefully making your life harder to be in control of something that in no way needs you in control of it is just the peak of wasted energy.
I don't think I know what you mean by making my life harder
I literally just dragged a box over my music folder, copied, went to the E:/MP3PLAYERNAMEHERE drive, and pasted
And how did you curate that folder, and the subfolders under it? How did you ID3 Tag your music? How many different tools and how much time was spent getting your music in a state where you could listen to a mix of all of your 90s rock or whatever?
every time i illegally downloaded a music file while 360 noscope pro mlg dunking on a nerd followed by slamming a 'dew i would carefully change all the tags myself and maybe put my own icons on them
honestly though i didn't really bother beyond having a folder for each band
0
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MrMisterJesus dying on the cross in pain? Morally better than us. One has to go "all in".Registered Userregular
My main experience with synching is that it's utterly opaque and has made having more than one computer worse than the holocaust.
I have yet to find the 'please just update my operating system without deleting all my shit' button
I'm finding it really hard to play Rainbow Six: Siege without talking to people. Even though not everyone in the matches I played so far had a headset, I think it'd help if I had one to coordinate with the 2-3 people who do.
I liked iTunes database syncing model. Sometimes I think I'm the only one who liked it on its own merits. I had way too much music in the iPod days and found it useful to set up sync rules rather than drag stuff on and off. It took a little more thought but it made my usage possible, which it wasn't before.
Now everything lives is some kind of nebulous cloud database so you don't have to drag files or setup sync rules. Not gonna pretend that's not an improvement in every sense.
Nah there are a lot of people who liked it.
Even as tech minded and DIY as I am, every time someone extolls the merits of self-managed folders filled with their MP3s and synching to the player like it were a flash drive as some kind of a good thing compared to what itunes (and later Zune) did I just don't get it. Purposefully making your life harder to be in control of something that in no way needs you in control of it is just the peak of wasted energy.
I don't think I know what you mean by making my life harder
I literally just dragged a box over my music folder, copied, went to the E:/MP3PLAYERNAMEHERE drive, and pasted
And how did you curate that folder, and the subfolders under it? How did you ID3 Tag your music? How many different tools and how much time was spent getting your music in a state where you could listen to a mix of all of your 90s rock or whatever?
does osx not have an equivalent of Ctrl clicking to select multiple files for copying at once or something
Sure it does, it had it before windows.
But that said, what I am asking is not "how did you drag your music onto the device" but rather "how did you get hundreds or thousands of songs cataloged, indexed, tagged, sorted and managed such that you could drag your folders onto the device" and if you were to start rating or sorting the music on the device how do those changes reflect back to the original PC you dragged it from.
I don't really know what you mean.
Generally the ripper did the tagging. I just kept everything in a single folder and picked out what I wanted on the device at the time. I only have a few hundred albums so it isn't hard to keep track of what's what. I can't think of any changes I'd make on the device itself that i'd want to copy back into the folder. Playlists, possibly, but they were just lists of files on my device and could be copied off it if desired but I tended to treat playlists as kind of ephemeral anyway so that never came up.
I liked iTunes database syncing model. Sometimes I think I'm the only one who liked it on its own merits. I had way too much music in the iPod days and found it useful to set up sync rules rather than drag stuff on and off. It took a little more thought but it made my usage possible, which it wasn't before.
Now everything lives is some kind of nebulous cloud database so you don't have to drag files or setup sync rules. Not gonna pretend that's not an improvement in every sense.
Nah there are a lot of people who liked it.
Even as tech minded and DIY as I am, every time someone extolls the merits of self-managed folders filled with their MP3s and synching to the player like it were a flash drive as some kind of a good thing compared to what itunes (and later Zune) did I just don't get it. Purposefully making your life harder to be in control of something that in no way needs you in control of it is just the peak of wasted energy.
It didn't make my life harder. There's the MP3, move it to the player, done. People just want to say "This song, here" and no faff in between.
The actually extra work involved is in managing and structuring your collection so that it's all in the right place, via folders and tags and such. And the thing is, iTunes isn't very good at that either. Fiddling with MP3 info and tags and such via iTunes is a real pain in the ass and like everything, Apple does not play well with others.
I buy a CD (or a digital album), drop it into iTunes or rip it, and I'm done. The album art, all the track info, the metadata, everything just kind of shows up. I never dig into the folders, I have no reason to. The very concept of even going into those folders feels alien to me at this point - like the shit I used to do when WinAmp/X11Amp was whipping the llama's ass.
And if I needed to edit any of the metadata because it was music I made or something, you just right click the song, select Show Info, and go nuts.
Maybe its all shit in windows? Like, the process is painless as fuck.
SW-4158-3990-6116
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
0
Options
HakkekageSpace Whore Academysumma cum laudeRegistered Userregular
anything but i need to get my lifts and my weight loss on, i felt the drag hardcore on those uphills
course was way easier than i expected. Even clocked in a 10:30 mile...on the 6th mile. Just cray. I felt really undertrained going into it too. Much self confidence right now
I did it motherfuckers. 2:26:02 is my official time. I was aiming for 2:30 and am surprised and elated by how well this race went. I felt really good pretty much right up to the end (until the last two miles when i slowed down considerably). Holy shiiii
dis me b4 bein all fuk u i got dis
dis me doin run i totally look liek im havin fun i bet
dis me really close to the finish after i ditched my sweaty jacket by throwing it in Beasto's face and then noticed him snapping a shot. I think i almost hit the girl behind me in the face woops
they give you a baller medal for finishing. fancy as fuk man
Then after Beast and I went to Sushi Palace which lets you order as many sushis as you want until you get full and boy did we eat
it was so gud. gud day. Beast was awesome waking up really early so he could come hold my shit and cheer me on. tired and fatigued a lil but fuggin worth it. those endorphins, man. fuck yesssssss
Oh shiiiiiiiiii-
That's awesome, great job Hakkes! There was a lot of hating on running this morning, talking about how people are miserable when they're doing that but I feel like this is evidence of the contrary, look at that photogenic ass picture at the end there. I gotta get in on something official like that this year, looks like a lot of fun.
+3
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HakkekageSpace Whore Academysumma cum laudeRegistered Userregular
I liked iTunes database syncing model. Sometimes I think I'm the only one who liked it on its own merits. I had way too much music in the iPod days and found it useful to set up sync rules rather than drag stuff on and off. It took a little more thought but it made my usage possible, which it wasn't before.
Now everything lives is some kind of nebulous cloud database so you don't have to drag files or setup sync rules. Not gonna pretend that's not an improvement in every sense.
Nah there are a lot of people who liked it.
Even as tech minded and DIY as I am, every time someone extolls the merits of self-managed folders filled with their MP3s and synching to the player like it were a flash drive as some kind of a good thing compared to what itunes (and later Zune) did I just don't get it. Purposefully making your life harder to be in control of something that in no way needs you in control of it is just the peak of wasted energy.
I don't think I know what you mean by making my life harder
I literally just dragged a box over my music folder, copied, went to the E:/MP3PLAYERNAMEHERE drive, and pasted
agree with choco. it is so much more complicated to get stuff on my iphone than it is on any other mp3 player i've ever had.
I'm on team Choco/OtLC.
I find the iTunes model extremely frustrating.
every person who doesn't like an acquired taste always seems to think everyone who likes it is faking it. it should be an official fallacy.
Posts
or it is just a really long handle and all the weight is on the other end probably
SO HEAVY, MAZZY
Weak baby arm Castle.
Get more swole.
I don't think I know what you mean by making my life harder
I literally just dragged a box over my music folder, copied, went to the E:/MP3PLAYERNAMEHERE drive, and pasted
imma hit u with this giant skillet!
which is why this is gonna be super interesting, because Now uses a new framework, that has been tested against shit like the Word Series.
Game of Thrones should have no problems whatsoever. Should.
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
agree with choco. it is so much more complicated to get stuff on my iphone than it is on any other mp3 player i've ever had.
This is awesome because it's kindasorta how brains work sometimes.
Getting iTunes to sync the right stuff, that was "making my life harder"
And how did you curate that folder, and the subfolders under it? How did you ID3 Tag your music? How many different tools and how much time was spent getting your music in a state where you could listen to a mix of all of your 90s rock or whatever?
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
lov u
it's not ideal, but it will do
laaaaaaadies
I don't think you can actually use MLB.tv to watch live games, but yes, the back end on this should be very solid.
it's a lot better
a lot better and they should stop trying to "help" until they get it right
I was just watching one.
That is what the subscription is for.
In fact I had two on. One was in picture in picture.
You can have up to 4 at once.
does osx not have an equivalent of Ctrl clicking to select multiple files for copying at once or something
you know what i'm thinking of, it's in market games you can't watch
yeah never mind, it'll be fine
Sure it does, it had it before windows.
But that said, what I am asking is not "how did you drag your music onto the device" but rather "how did you get hundreds or thousands of songs cataloged, indexed, tagged, sorted and managed such that you could drag your folders onto the device" and if you were to start rating or sorting the music on the device how do those changes reflect back to the original PC you dragged it from.
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
Just a bit different in how it works. It is blackouts which means it just checks your location and says watch it on tv.
The World Series is different. Runs off national broadcasters so I think it works for everyone.
title, album, artist
all the info I need
I have never and still to this day do not require or even want my music to be sorted in any way other than by Artist, Album, and Song. Every MP3 player I've ever used including that Creative Zen Nomad was able to parse that information. I have also never wanted to rate my music on the device, or want it to do anything to my PC when I plug it in. You sit there, you eat the MP3s that I put inside of you when I decide that you need more MP3s in you, and then when I want to listen to something I select it.
This is a really silly argument.
I did it motherfuckers. 2:26:02 is my official time. I was aiming for 2:30 and am surprised and elated by how well this race went. I felt really good pretty much right up to the end (until the last two miles when i slowed down considerably). Holy shiiii
dis me b4 bein all fuk u i got dis
dis me doin run i totally look liek im havin fun i bet
dis me really close to the finish after i ditched my sweaty jacket by throwing it in Beasto's face and then noticed him snapping a shot. I think i almost hit the girl behind me in the face woops
they give you a baller medal for finishing. fancy as fuk man
Then after Beast and I went to Sushi Palace which lets you order as many sushis as you want until you get full and boy did we eat
it was so gud. gud day. Beast was awesome waking up really early so he could come hold my shit and cheer me on. tired and fatigued a lil but fuggin worth it. those endorphins, man. fuck yesssssss
@BEAST! @desc @Kid Presentable @programjunkie @Casual
NNID: Hakkekage
Yeah, I just checked the site and it looks like this is the second year you can watch the WS live, which is neat.
I wish you could watch in market though, or I could move so I could watch Rays games.
It didn't make my life harder. There's the MP3, move it to the player, done. People just want to say "This song, here" and no faff in between.
The actually extra work involved is in managing and structuring your collection so that it's all in the right place, via folders and tags and such. And the thing is, iTunes isn't very good at that either. Fiddling with MP3 info and tags and such via iTunes is a real pain in the ass and like everything, Apple does not play well with others.
every time i illegally downloaded a music file while 360 noscope pro mlg dunking on a nerd followed by slamming a 'dew i would carefully change all the tags myself and maybe put my own icons on them
honestly though i didn't really bother beyond having a folder for each band
I have yet to find the 'please just update my operating system without deleting all my shit' button
I don't really know what you mean.
Generally the ripper did the tagging. I just kept everything in a single folder and picked out what I wanted on the device at the time. I only have a few hundred albums so it isn't hard to keep track of what's what. I can't think of any changes I'd make on the device itself that i'd want to copy back into the folder. Playlists, possibly, but they were just lists of files on my device and could be copied off it if desired but I tended to treat playlists as kind of ephemeral anyway so that never came up.
@hakkekage
I buy a CD (or a digital album), drop it into iTunes or rip it, and I'm done. The album art, all the track info, the metadata, everything just kind of shows up. I never dig into the folders, I have no reason to. The very concept of even going into those folders feels alien to me at this point - like the shit I used to do when WinAmp/X11Amp was whipping the llama's ass.
And if I needed to edit any of the metadata because it was music I made or something, you just right click the song, select Show Info, and go nuts.
Maybe its all shit in windows? Like, the process is painless as fuck.
Let's play Mario Kart or something...
anything but i need to get my lifts and my weight loss on, i felt the drag hardcore on those uphills
course was way easier than i expected. Even clocked in a 10:30 mile...on the 6th mile. Just cray. I felt really undertrained going into it too. Much self confidence right now
NNID: Hakkekage
Step 2: Live life.
Oh shiiiiiiiiii-
That's awesome, great job Hakkes! There was a lot of hating on running this morning, talking about how people are miserable when they're doing that but I feel like this is evidence of the contrary, look at that photogenic ass picture at the end there. I gotta get in on something official like that this year, looks like a lot of fun.
ilu u desc u r my sun and stars
NNID: Hakkekage
I'm on team Choco/OtLC.
I find the iTunes model extremely frustrating.
the "no true scotch man" fallacy.