Dealzmodo Hack: Making iTunes Work For You

Whether you have an iThing or not, you might use iTunes to manage music, listen to internet radio and podcasts, and buy music and video? If you do, here’s how to get it working—your way.

There was a time in the distant past when iTunes was a nice basic music manager for devices made by Creative and others, when DRM-laced music and video was just a dream in some lawyer’s eye. Now, after the explosion of iPhones and iPods and the proliferation of legal media downloading, iTunes has become a necessary choice for music and video organizing. But as much as the player has improved since 2001, it’s still annoyingly limited, throwing up barriers for enthusiasts and casual users alike. Lucky for us (and despite Apple’s lack of cooperation), plenty of hacks, tweaks and add-ons can help fill the gaps—for both Mac OS and Windows. Here are some of the best:

Sync With Whatever the Hell You Want
iTunes nowadays will only directly sync with Apple products, but we’re a gadget site, so we sought out a few apps to make syncing your iTunes library with other devices as painless as possible:
iTunes Sync (Win): This tidy little app will sync your library with just about anything that Windows recognizes as a removable disk. The super-long supported device list only scratches the surface, but includes a lot of BlackBerry and Symbian phones—again, anything that your PC assigns a drive letter should work just fine.
iTunes Agent: Almost the same as iTunes Sync. If that app fails you, you might have better luck with this.
BlackBerry Media Sync (Mac/Win): Exactly what it sounds like, though Mac users will have to use a beta build.
Pocket Tunes Sync (Win): If you can’t connect your WinMo or Palm handset to your PC as a mass storage device for some iTunes Sync or iTunes Agent love, this’ll do. Counter to the Dealzmodo Hack philosophy, though, it’s a paid app, so try the other stuff first.

Take Full Control
iTunes doesn’t provide many control options. Aside from the main window, you can manage iTunes from its compact mode, or in Windows, shunt the buttons to your Start Bar. That’s it! Unless you install these:
You Control: Tunes (Mac): Places extremely comprehensive controls in your Menu Bar. It also recognizes keyboard shortcuts, which some people go inexplicably apeshit over, and can display pretty little toaster notifications.
iTunes Remote Control (Mac): A simple app that controls iTunes over your network. Perfect if you use iTunes as a media server.
FoxyTunes (Mac/Win/Lin): A Firefox extension that places buttons in your browser window, where your mouse probably spends most of its time anyway.
• Remote for iPhone/iPod Touch/Android: Your iPod, iPhone or G1 is now a fantastic iTunes remote. Congratulations.

Really, Truly Share Your Music
iTunes’ sharing abilities, which have been eroding since the day they were first introduced, are now officially lame. Third parties, that’s your cue:
Simplify Media (Mac/Win/Lin): It’s hard to overstate how useful this is. Simplify Media shares your library so that you can access your music remotely, via iTunes or their fantastic iPhone client. You can also access friends’ libraries directly through iTunes, as if they were connected to your LAN. Downloading isn’t enabled, but Simplify more than makes up for that with dead-easy setup and reliable streaming.
Mojo (Mac/Win): Simplify Media’s sketchy, somewhat unreliable cousin, Mojo lets you download as well as listen to other users’ music. My experience with the app has been a mixed, but when it works, it works well.
LogMeIn Hamachi (Win, with Mac/Lin console options available for advanced users): Not the most obvious way to share iTunes libraries, but a surprisingly elegant one. Hamachi is a zero-config VPN service that can connect you to another computer over the internet as if it were on your home network. That means file sharing, LAN gaming and—of course—iTunes streaming, all working seamlessly.

Install Scripts, You Nerd
You can get a lot out of iTunes with a little AppleScript, and there might be something in this for you Windows nerds, too.
• Doug, of DougScripts.com, is the preeminent master of AppleScript arts, and he’s compiled 400+ scripts to manage your music and album art, download artist info or lyrics, or control pretty much anything else the iTunes touches—perfect for Foobar-loving, OCD-having power users. And don’t be off put by the word “script,” as Doug packages them with a neat little installer. Lifehacker compiled some of their favorites a while back, but it’s worth exploring the site on your own.
• AppleScript won’t do much good for Windows users. For you, the best options are Teridon’s iTunes Scripts. These are Perl scripts or small .exe files (recommended) that mimic some of Doug’s best: Dupe deletion, advanced artwork management and sophisticated playlisting to name a few.

Miscellaneous Add-ons
There are plenty of useful hacks and add-ons that don’t fit into the above categories. I can’t stress enough how useful it would be to look at Lifehacker’s fantastic list from a while back, but here are a few of my favorites, too:
iTunes Folder Watch (Win): Monitors your music folders, automatically adding new files to iTunes.
Last.fm/AudioScrobbler (Mac/Win/Lin): Integrates iTunes with the fantastic Last.fm social network, with a plugin to upload your listening stats. The standalone app plays nicely with iTunes as well, letting you rate and tag songs as they play.
Dupin (Mac): A simple app for deleting library duplicates.
CD Art Display (Win): Presents Now Playing info and cover art however your please. Lots of skins are available, it that’s your kind of thing.
DockArt (Mac): Simple, but perfect, DockArt replaces the iTunes icon with album art.

If you’re feeling adventurous, test DVD Jon’s odd new media manager, doubleTwist. It’s not ready to replace iTunes yet, but it is, as Adrian put it, “extremely promising.”

Dealzmodo Hacks are intended to help you sustain your crippling gadget addiction through tighter times. If you come across any on your own that are particularly useful, send it to our tips line (Subject: Dealzmodo Hack). Check back every other Thursday for free DIY tricks to breathe new life into hardware that you already own.

Amazon Kindle Now Also an iPhone App

Amazon wasn’t just teasing you whiners who blabbed on about how you’d rather just read ebooks on your iPhone: The iPhone and iPod Touch app has arrived.

The free program brings several of the Kindle’s functions to the iPod and iPhone’s much smaller, non-E-Ink screen, including the same electronic books, magazines and newspapers that Kindle owners can buy, and the ability to change text size, add bookmarks, note and highlight stuff. From what we can see at first glance of the app itself, there’s no dictionary or search.

If you already have both a Kindle and an iPhone, Amazon’s program syncs the two so that you can keep your bookmarks on both devices. Immediately after loading up the app, this worked exactly as billed, and the page we’re on in the Kindle 2 showed on the iPhone.

While my first thought was “Jesus (not Diaz), Amazon’s bent on cannibalizing itself,” I guess the move kind of makes sense. People who want E-Ink will still buy the Kindle 2 (reviewed here), but perhaps this will steer people away from the other multitudinous, less complete iTunes ebook options. [iTunes Link to Amazon Kindle App]

The Week in iPhone Apps: It Poops

This week we’ve cast the net out a bit further to catch some gems from this month that may have escaped our attention, including a repackaged, excrement-producing pop-culture classic. And it’s no fart app.

Tamagotchi: ‘Round the World: But unfortunately, it’s just as inane. Gone is the dot-matrix Tamagotchi you may remember from 1996, and in its place, a not-particularly-cute generic cast of knockoff superflat characters. The game appears to be based around gardening and growing plants by doing a rain dance: I gave up after a few minutes. But it poops, which is always nice. $6 with free lite version.

PhotoKeys Photoshop Remote: If you keep your phone docked near your keyboard like I do and do some heavy ‘shopping, this looks pretty handy. It turns your iPhone into a customizable tool palette by talking to a mini server app on your desktop. Windows and Mac are both supported. It’s $4.

Epiphany Recorder: Innovating above the countless other voice recorders in the store, Epiphany starts recording a buffer the moment it’s launched, but it only saves the audio you tell it to pressing the “Remember that!” button, which automatically saves the previous few seconds or minutes of audio (you pick). It’s great for recording an interview by grabbing only the important parts, saving major time in transcription. Very cool, and it’s free.

FedEx: There are a handful of other package-tracking apps in the store, but FedEx’s new official app looks nice for its ability to tie into you FedEx.com account. You can monitor shipments you’ve scheduled online, as well as create new labels from your phone. Nice interface too, and it’s free.

CTU: Even though this app is a few years too late, the last remaining folks still enjoying Bauer Hour can now create the show’s trademark multi-splitscreen-with-digital-timer tableaux with their photos. As a clock app and a novelty, not bad. $2

This Week’s App News on Giz:
Mac Plus Emulator now Available for Jailbroken iPhones

Why Most Content Apps Suck (But Some Would Be Amazing)

iTunes Concept Shows How iPhone App Management Should Have Worked From the Start

Metal Gear Solid Touch For iPhone Trailer Has Me Worried

Major Label Bands Decide App Store Is Cool, Want to Take Over Your iPhone

5-Row QWERTY Jailbreak App Fixes One of the iPhone Keyboard’s Most Annoying Flaws

Dashboard Widgets For Jailbroken iPhones: Hot or Not?

‘That’s What She Said’ iPhone App Is the Opposite of Comedy

Your iPhone Is now a Kitchen Thanks to Cooking Mama

TV.com iPhone App Streams Free Full-Length CBS and Showtime Shows

iMafia for iPhone Circumvents the App Store, Sells Other Apps In-Game…and Apple Willingly Approves

Apple Purging App Store Of Every Last Emoticon Enabler

This list is in no way definitive. If you’ve spotted a great app that hit the store this week, give us a heads up or, better yet, your firsthand impressions in the comments. And for even more apps: see our previous weekly roundups here, and check out our Favorite iPhone Apps Directory and our original iPhone App Review Marathon. Have a good weekend everybody.

Apple experiments with iTunes Pass: it’s not what you think, and it’s lame

If it seems like Ma and Pops over at the iTunes store are toying with the idea of subscription music, look again. The iTunes Pass is more akin to buying a season of Celebrity Rehab: long-time Depeche Mode fans can put down $18.99 to get everything the band releases between now and the seemingly arbitrary date of June 16, 2009, including the new single, various promotional bits (remixes, videos, etc.) and the Sounds of the Universe album when it’s eventually released. The audio comes in iTunes Plus (256kbps / AAC / no DRM) format, and while Apple doesn’t say exactly what you’ll be getting, the company promises that you won’t wind up paying more for the pass than the value of everything you receive. Of course, what we’d really like to see is this sort of a deal for a band that didn’t peak twenty years ago. In the meantime, we’ll be catching up with Depeche Mode the way nature intended — during the weekly spin of Personal Jesus at 80’s Night.

[Via Tech Digest]

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Apple experiments with iTunes Pass: it’s not what you think, and it’s lame originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 24 Feb 2009 11:26:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Week in iPhone Apps: Train Your Brain

Feeling the cobwebs starting to accumulate upstairs here late in the winter? Here are a few apps that can add +10 INT points, plus a few more less intellectually strenuous toys as always.

Brain Thaw: I’m kind of surprised that brain training games aren’t to be found in the same volume as, well, fart apps-a quick mental puzzle is the perfect mobile game. Besides being well designed (ADORABLE PENGUINS), Brain Thaw gives you a quick math rule to follow for a few minutes in line, and logs your scores with players of the game worldwide. $1

Wikiquiz: Wikiquiz pulls a fragment from a random Wikipedia article (a difficulty setting chooses how random) and asks you to identify it. The more you can get in a set amount of time, the higher the score. Cool idea for a game. It’s a buck.

AirPhones: Pretty interesting idea—AirPhones works with a little server app on your Intel Mac (Windows and Universal clients are coming, says the devs) to stream audio from any application to your iPhone or iPod touch. So if you like to watch movies in bed on your desktop Mac with Front Row, for instance, you can use your iPhone as a wireless headphone receiver. At $7 it’s overpriced Since the price was just slashed to $4, it could be cool if your specific situation warrants something like this.

Cubert: It’s Q-Bert! For a buck!

This Week’s App News on Giz:

The Week in iPhone Apps: Essential Jailbreak Apps – last week’s special Jailbreak edition. If you missed it, have a look and get jailbreakin’.

How To: Tether the iPhone or G1 To Your Laptop For Free 3G Broadband

Card Counting iPhone App Could Get Your Legs Broken

Bow Cam iPhone App: Barks to Get Pup Attention for the Photo

Apple’s Puritanical Review System Kills South Park iPhone App

Presidents of the USA (SHE’S LUMP!) Offer Complete Music Catalog Via iPhone App

This list is in no way definitive. If you’ve spotted a great app that hit the store this week, give us a heads up or, better yet, your firsthand impressions in the comments. And for even more apps: see our previous weekly roundups here, and check out our Favorite iPhone Apps Directory and our original iPhone App Review Marathon. Have a good weekend everybody.

The Week in iPhone Apps: Essential Jailbreak Apps

Apple just today declared jailbreaking illegal. So, in outlaw style, it’s a good day to take a break from the App Store to peruse the naughty treasures available to jailbreakers via Cydia.

As you’re well aware by now, Apple’s official SDK limits apps from doing lots of things, like cut and paste, video capture, and dubiously legal things like NES emulation. All of the apps listed here do something Apple doesn’t approve of, and they can be found by searching Cydia, an installer that automatically appears on your iPhone once you’ve successfully complete jailbreaking your phone. We’re not going to run through that process here (Quickpwn and Pwnage Tool are your friends), but suffice it to say, Apple doesn’t condone the practice, and there are certain risks to messing up your iPhone when you jailbreak or install any unauthorized apps. Be forewarned. Here’s what we’ve safely tested:

WinterBoard – The essential change-my-appearance app for the iPhone since the days before the App Store, it’s been known by other seasons before (SummerBoard, for example), but it’s essentially the same: You download themes, and can use this app to apply them system-wide. It also gives you other appearance controls like “Dim Wallpaper” and “Solid Status Bar.”

BossPrefs – An insanely useful utility for making one-tap system adjustments like toggling 3G, EDGE, wi-fi or Bluetooth. You can turn your mail on and off fast too. I like the “Hide Icons” feature, where you can go in and take certain apps off of your home screens without taking them entirely off your iPhone.

Search – An amazing app for searching everything on your iPhone, including MAIL! It’s a lot like the Sherlock of old—type a search term, hit enter, and it starts digging through Contacts, SMS, Notes, Events, Safari Bookmarks and Safari History. Tap any search result, and you go straight to that app. (We also tried Searcher, which does all of the above but does not search mail).

Cycorder – The semi-answer to iPhone’s lack of video recording, Cycorder does motion JPEG recording (now with audio). It looks as good as you can expect with that camera. The only catch is, in order to pull video files off of the damn phone, you have to use SSH or something else that can access the file structure. Nobody said bootleg app use was a cakewalk.

Snapture – An example of a for-profit jailbreak app, Snapture gives you basic controls for free for 20 tries, but then asks for $8, and in return gives you access to albums and all sorts of stuff. It’s risky considering any jailbroken app may not work the next time you update your iPhone’s software, but in this case, it’s at least a well designed app, giving you lots of camera controls (timers, auto-rotation, color mode, an on-screen level) plus a shutter button that is the entire screen, so it’s easier to take pictures with one semi-steady hand.

xGPS – This GPS program made a name for itself the other day by saying that, by February 20, it would have turn-by-turn speech navigation. While you wait for that, you can check out the nominal version available now, which is mostly just Google Maps with some extra tools like GPS tracking.

Clippy – Copy and paste really do work on an iPhone, and it’s system-wide. However, there are limitations. Once you’ve installed this utility from Cydia, you get to it by going to the number keys on the pop-up keyboard. As you can see, it appears above the standard numbers. As you might guess from that, you can only copy or paste when you have access to the keyboard. So copying an address off of a website is not doable, even though you would be able to paste any address into maps once you had it. There are new features that just popped up which I haven’t explored yet—maybe you know about them.

NES.app – An NES emulator that keeps getting better. If you can handle the touch controls, it’ll handle most of your ROMs at near full speed. And this is certainly something you won’t find in the App Store at any time in the future.

There are a lot of multimedia apps, like TuneWiki, which gives you lyrics to your iTunes songs, Shuffle, which does Pandora-like smart shuffling of your library based on what you like and don’t like, and MxTube, which lets you save YouTube videos. While those are all nifty, they’re not as essential as the ones above. If you feel that we’ve missed something really truly essential, then by all means let us know. As usual, with so many iPhone apps out there, this is in no way a complete listing.

Oh, and as for that iPhone Modem icon in the image you may have noticed? It’s the only way you can tether your iPhone, and we’ll have even more on that in tomorrow’s Saturday How-To. Check it!

This Week’s App News On Giz:

The 25 Best iPhone Apps For Outdoor Adventurers

WhatTheFont For iPhone IDs Fonts From Text in Snapped Photos

Turn-By-Turn Voice Navigation Comes to Jailbroken iPhones

31 Fart Apps In 90 Seconds

ServersMan App Turns the iPhone Into an All-Out Web Server

For even more app coverage: see our previous weekly roundups here, and check out our Favorite iPhone Apps Directory and our original iPhone App Review Marathon. Have a good weekend everybody.

Video: Viliv’s S5 gets price, March release, and iTunes

We finally have the release and pricing details for the Viliv S5. Up for pre-order on the 24th in Korea, the XP-based MID with 4.8-inch touchscreen will begin shipping locally on March 3rd. Closer to home, the $649 S5 Premium model is scheduled to ship to the US and Europe by the end of March. That configuration will include a 60GB hard disk, Intel Silverthorne-class 1.33GHz Z520 CPU (yes, the very same proc as the VAIO P), GPS, Bluetooth, WiFi, and 1GB of memory. Lesser spec’d models and a maxed-out F-LOG version with a DMB television tuner will only be available in Korea. And know what’s great about a MID running XP? You can install pretty much any application you want, including iTunes as demonstrated in the video posted after the break. It’s no iPod touch, but then again… it’s no iPod touch.

Continue reading Video: Viliv’s S5 gets price, March release, and iTunes

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Video: Viliv’s S5 gets price, March release, and iTunes originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 13 Feb 2009 06:41:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Apple prepping iTunes Replay on-demand streaming service?

Probably more than any other facet of Apple, we’ve seen rumor after rumor regarding iTunes fade away in the sunset. Of course, many of those delightful plans were likely shot down by the likes of the MPAA, RIAA and other so-called content guardians, but we say all that in order to depress your hopes on this one. For whatever it’s worth, an undisclosed source at CNET has confirmed an AppleInsider report that Cupertino is prepping an on-demand video streaming service for the next iteration of iTunes. Slated to be dubbed iTunes Replay, the service would purportedly “allow users to stream their iTunes video purchases directly from the company’s servers for playback anywhere, anytime without eating up local storage.” There’s no denying that Netflix‘s Watch Instantly has been a universal hit, but that’s in large part due to the firm’s willingness to embed that functionality onto all sorts of devices. Is Apple planning on going toe-to-toe with the market leader via your computer and a box it still regards as a hobby? We’ve got our doubts, obviously.

[Via CNET]

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Apple prepping iTunes Replay on-demand streaming service? originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 12 Feb 2009 08:53:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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The Week in iPhone Apps: A Good Week For Cheapskate Gamers

The App Store follows trends more closely than your 13-year-old sister at Hot Topic, and often, that’s a bad thing. But this week has revealed a trend I think you’re going to like.

Rolando Lite: While charging full price for what should arguably be a free upgrade is one App Store trend we’d like to see die (see below), here’s one that’s great: lite versions of the most popular non-free games. Rolando is fantastic if you haven’t played it yet, and now you can try before you buy with the free Lite, which is limited to the first stage only. Free.

Super Monkey Ball Lite: And what ho? A free lite version of Monkey Ball too with three stages from the full game? Keep it up game publishers, keep it up.

X-Plane Extreme: It’s kind of annoying how X-Plane keeps packaging new planes into all-new editions of the app, charging 10 bucks for each one, but X-Plane Extreme does look pretty great. This one’s bringing the military jets, from the F-22 Raptor, B-2 Stealth Bomber and the ol’ SR-71 Blackbird spy plane, and they look beautiful. If you haven’t bought X-Plane already and dig flight sims, Extreme looks like the version to get (there is also one for Airliners and Helicopters, if that’s your thing).

Light Bike Full Version: On sale for a buck for a limited time only, this is the just-released full version of Pankaku’s Tron game with the awesome two-hands-one-iPhone four-player mode we liked so much when we first saw it. Very cool. $1

Digital Bass Line: I’ve been wanting to play with Korg’s awesome DS-10 synth software for the DS for quite some time, but until I get my hands on it, this great Roland TB-303 emulator will tide me over. The 303 is the bass synth companion to the legendary 808 drum machine, and it’s reproduced quite faithfully here-really fun to play around with, even if you’re not a musician. It’s $5.

Almond Emulator: And finally, do you ever get the sense you’re watching someone lose their mind via disconnected clues? Like, say, the iPhone apps they write? The Almond Emulator costs $1, and offers the chance to taste, smell, feel and listen to a digital on-screen almond; each button pressed simply changes the text above to read “It tastes just like an almond.” Riiiiight. Probably the strangest app I’ve seen-kick this guy a buck, he needs it to refill his meds.

This Week’s iPhone App News on Giz:

Where’s My Menupages iPhone App?

Inside the Mind of the Man Who Gave Us iFart Mobile

LCD Clock iPhone App Makes Your Real Clock Seem Pitiful and Sad

Watch and Listen To The Geniuses of This Week’s TED Conference On Your iPhone

How To Text With Adorable Japanese Emoji On Your iPhone For a Buck

How To Text With Adorable Japanese Emoji On Your iPhone For a Buck

Rumor: iPhone 3.0 Might Let Apps Run in the Background for Real Multitasking

ClearCam for iPhone Stitches 2MP Photos Together Into 4MP Ones

How to Find Awesome iPhone Apps (no place better than the Week in iPhone Apps, though, obviously)

Crackulous Allows for App Store Piracy

Internet Visionary MC Hammer Releases Eagerly-Anticipated “HammerTime” iPhone App

This list is in no way definitive. If you’ve spotted a great app that hit the store this week, give us a heads up or, better yet, your firsthand impressions in the comments. And for even more apps: see our previous weekly roundups here, and check out our Favorite iPhone Apps Directory and our original iPhone App Review Marathon. Have a good weekend everybody.

NBC Wants iTunes to be a Piracy Detector

This article was written on April 17, 2008 by CyberNet.

piracy detector

The ad:tech conference is currently going on at the Moscone Center in San Francisco and one of the most interesting things to come out of it came from the mouth of NBC’s Chief Digital Officer George Kliavkoff. In a nutshell, he said he wanted Apple to build a piracy detecting iTunes and to offer flexible pricing before NBC would allow their content to return to iTunes. Here’s what he said:

If you look at studies about MP3 players, especially leading MP3 players and what portion of that content is pirated, and think about how that content gets onto that device, it has to go through a gate-keeping piece of software, which would be a convenient place to put some anti-piracy measures.

When he says “leading MP3 players” of course he’s thinking Apple’s iPod devices and when he mentioned a gate-keeping piece of software, he was obviously thinking of iTunes. Kliavkoff went on to talk about how piracy really hurts NBC and that they’re not able to invest as much as they’d like into the next generation of film and TV products. So would Apple ever take such drastic measures and incorporate anti-piracy technology into iTunes? We’re doubtful.

Pricing of the shows came up as well and Kliavkoff went on to talk about how they’d love to be on iTunes but he says “It’s really difficult for us to work with any distribution partner who says ‘Here’s the wholesale price and the retail price,’ especially when the price doesn’t reflect the full value of the product.” Apple will not budge on pricing and they would be stupid if they tried to incorporate anti-piracy technology, so it looks like we won’t be seeing NBC shows on iTunes any time soon.

Source: News.com

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