What with the optical drive gone from all new Apple products I wondered if Itunes 11 still allowed you the option of burning your own cds to Itunes when you put them in the optical drive?
What with the optical drive gone from all new Apple products I wondered if Itunes 11 still allowed you the option of burning your own cds to Itunes when you put them in the optical drive?
Why use discs to store your entire library when you can just use iTunes Match?
No loss. Time Machine backs up the entire iTunes folder to whichever external HD you tell it to go, or you can use the backup program of your choice to accomplish the same thing. The typical iTunes library is so large that backing it up to an optical drive (even blu-ray) just doesn't make any sense anymore.You can import stuff to iTunes, but you cannot make a CD/DVD back up copy of your library anymore.
Some people still have car stereos that play CDs and do not have an input for an iPod or MP3 player.Of course. External CD burner is about £20. I would think that not many people are bothered anymore.
Some people still have car stereos that play CDs and do not have an input for an iPod or MP3 player.
Cassette tapes? How quaint.And some people still have cars that use cassette tapes.
Because relying on Apple's internet service is just stupid. They have never managed web based services well. It's also a damn site quicker and free. Not everyone wants to waste money to apple when you can buy a hand full of blank DVD's.
And some people still have cars that use cassette tapes.
Cassette tapes? How quaint.
My dad still keeps a cassette player in his car and loves to listen to the crackling records while he drives. No technology is going to change that
My car has an iPod input (Ford Sync) and a CD player. I use them both. I love having my entire iTunes library in the car, but when I listen to audiobooks, which I do quite often, I prefer them to be on CD. I've found that its much easier with a CD to get back to where I've left off. Audiobooks in iTunes have a resume feature, I know, but not when Ford Sync loses sync with the iPod and has to re-index (which it does more often than I'd like). Some chapters are more than 30 minutes long and it's a pain "fast" forwarding to where I was. That's where CDs come in.Some people still have car stereos that play CDs and do not have an input for an iPod or MP3 player.
So basically what is being said here backs up my thoughts that Apple has pushed forward with no concern for its customers habits.What good is thinness if it takes away function?Bring back the optical drive to the Imac,its a desktop workstation not a damn travelling unit.While your at it put in Blu ray for those who would like to use the display as a media center.
What with the optical drive gone from all new Apple products I wondered if Itunes 11 still allowed you the option of burning your own cds to Itunes when you put them in the optical drive?
I've given up archiving my music to CD/DVDs for two reasons:
After faithfully doing CD/DVD backups for years, dozens of CDs only 5 to 7 years old have become unreadable thanks to disc rot.
My iTunes library comprises 63,000 music items at 400 GB; 750 movies at 830 GB; 4900 TV shows at 980 GB; and 6,050 audiobooks at 955 GB, so it's no longer practical to back them up to DVDs.
Instead, I back up to 1 and 2-TB disk drives. I have a backup disk drive and an offsite backup disk drive for each source drive and so far it's worked out pretty well. That amounts to 21 TB in total.
what offsite backup have you used that would be fast enough to back up 2 terabytes of data. I have some videos id like to back up but all the online backup sites ive looked at would take me 2 months to upload them since they upload so slow.