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zhenya

macrumors 604
Jan 6, 2005
6,929
3,677
Syncing and downloading are definitely not the same thing. Syncing is fast and takes place wether or not the iPad is being used, downloading is much slower and implies the iPad is actively being used and instructed to download. On my local network I just have to fire iTunes and instruct it to fill the iPad with intelligent playlists and mixes created automatically by iTunes. If I want to change a selection, I am activating another playlist. There's almost no manual intervention there. It is much slower than through USB, but I don't care much as syncing implies that I am sitting and not as in a hurry as downloading on the iPad itself.

Having so long a gap between songs played from the cloud, either streaming or downloaded as needed, is definitely not transparent. I am not telling about a one-two second gap, but most often fifteen to thirty, to the point I wonder if the Music application has crashed or not, since there are no actual signs of an undergoing operation, should it be a spinning wheel, a sound, etc. The play time indicator just stays at 0.

When you delete a matched song from your library, it remains available in iCloud. If you re-dowload it, it will be in the AAC-matched version, along with correct tagging. This was my primary motive to get iTunes Match, as I got fed up trying different retaggers that never quite worked. The second one was getting better versions of existing songs without having to look for them one by one, but let the system do its job by itself.


It is strange, indeed, that Apple haven't thought to make playback gapless.

I can see what you are saying, but in practice there is little difference for me. If I change the playlist I have synced chances are I am going to initiate the phone to sync right then as well to make sure it is up to date. With wifi sync in theory they should sync all the time, but in practice none of the 4 active idevices we have in the house actually do. I don't particularly find usb sync that much faster than downloading, but then I'm on a 30Mb line.

I don't know what issue you are having with gapless playback; my cloud playback is gapless unless there is very poor cellular signal.

Match will replace your songs, but it will not replace the metadata. Apple was very clear about that when they released it.
 

Defender2010

Cancelled
Jun 6, 2010
3,131
1,097
I can see what you are saying, but in practice there is little difference for me. If I change the playlist I have synced chances are I am going to initiate the phone to sync right then as well to make sure it is up to date. With wifi sync in theory they should sync all the time, but in practice none of the 4 active idevices we have in the house actually do. I don't particularly find usb sync that much faster than downloading, but then I'm on a 30Mb line.

I don't know what issue you are having with gapless playback; my cloud playback is gapless unless there is very poor cellular signal.

Match will replace your songs, but it will not replace the metadata. Apple was very clear about that when they released it.

30MB line?? Come on! In your first post you said: considering that a fast WiFi connection is hard to come by when we exactly need it,
I think you are a wind up! Over complicating things, perhaps a troll?
 

zhenya

macrumors 604
Jan 6, 2005
6,929
3,677
30MB line?? Come on! In your first post you said: considering that a fast WiFi connection is hard to come by when we exactly need it,
I think you are a wind up! Over complicating things, perhaps a troll?

I never said any such thing.

Ostensibly you will be making most of these changes to your playlists when you are at home, with a good wifi connection. If you had chosen to sync instead, you would not even have the OPTION of accessing the other content on the road. What's so hard to understand here? Either method needs management. One gives you access to everything else when away from home, the other doesn't.
 

Cubytus

macrumors 65816
Original poster
Mar 2, 2007
1,436
18
I can see what you are saying, but in practice there is little difference for me. If I change the playlist I have synced chances are I am going to initiate the phone to sync right then as well to make sure it is up to date. With wifi sync in theory they should sync all the time, but in practice none of the 4 active idevices we have in the house actually do. I don't particularly find usb sync that much faster than downloading, but then I'm on a 30Mb line.

I don't know what issue you are having with gapless playback; my cloud playback is gapless unless there is very poor cellular signal.
First, my iPad is a Wifi version, and I would have to be crazy to stream everything on a 500MB 3G plan when it already comes at more than $15 a month. Second, my line is a plain standard 6Mbps, which is already $51 a month. And third, if I change the playlist in iTunes, the Sync button is only one click away, so I am doing it as often as needed. When I do have a fast Wifi access, I am not listening to anything (University), but when I try, this is far from being transparent. Only I don't get 30-seconds gaps like elsewhere, rather 8-seconds.

I never said any such thing.

Ostensibly you will be making most of these changes to your playlists when you are at home, with a good wifi connection. If you had chosen to sync instead, you would not even have the OPTION of accessing the other content on the road. What's so hard to understand here? Either method needs management. One gives you access to everything else when away from home, the other doesn't.
It still does seem somewhat "un-Apple" to have to select either 100% cloud, or 100% local instead of a seamless transition between the two, maybe with active caching of songs while the iPad is idling. But even then, considering the iPad tends to drain its battery quite fast, I am not sure constantly relying on iCloud would be a solution.

And Defender2010 you're getting confused by zhenya's words: thos in the first post were mine.
 
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