INTERACT FORUM
More => Old Versions => JRiver Media Center 25 for Windows => Topic started by: Matt on June 04, 2019, 10:27:09 am
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Well it looks like it's official.
iTunes is going away after 18 years.
We're feeling kind of smug because we're still going strong. We watched Winamp (the player that started it all for me) pass away as well.
Rest in peace iTunes, and keep kicking tail JRiver!
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Good riddance!
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What really separated Apple from others was the integrated iTunes Store. The ability to download music easily and legally was a major advance. Remember Napster? But now their streaming services are on the rise, while the sale of music is definitely on the decline. The real story here is that Apple is emphasizing their streaming services over ownership. The new music and TV apps support user owned music, but are geared towards streaming.
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iTunes->iRiver ;D ;D ;D
I have also Qobuz as streaming service but I am really happy to have JRiver because I have many ripped CD's which are not available through Qobuz (e.g. Telarc CD's)
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Hi
iTunes is crap.
I tried it on PC and Mac.
Awfull to use and the worst is the nasty store. I hate it.
Audio quality is not good, can do only stereo, cannot even read flac, cannot convert any to any, cannot do R128 and and..
I am glad, itunesdied, itunes rest in peace, amen!
Peter
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Well it looks like it's official.
iTunes is going away after 18 years.
We're feeling kind of smug because we're still going strong. We watched Winamp (the player that started it all for me) pass away as well.
Rest in peace iTunes, and keep kicking tail JRiver!
I've still got a copy of iTunes running on a dedicated old Windows laptop to support the two iPods I use in my car. My car is 15 years old and the iPods connect into the car's audio system via a connector in the glove box. So I am pretty much locked into using the two old iPods that I purchased in 2005. The newer iPods do not work with the car. I've got a special playlist in MC that I use to export tunes to iTunes for those iPods.
I had been on the iTunes/AppleTV bandwagon for a few years, but I started to notice the slow lock-in that I was experiencing. For example, in AppleTV, I would search for a song I knew I had in my music accumulation. AppleTV would always show the search results as finding the song in Apple's Music store. It did not find the song in my library.
That was the last straw.
I was able to tolerate the lack of FLAC support. I was able to tolerate the mediocre database behind iTunes.
But when AppleTV would try to get me to buy a song I knew I already owned, well, them's fighting words.
I switched to MC, and everything's been sunshine and rainbows ever since.
The world has passed by iTunes.
R.I.P iTunes.
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Jubilation is premature ...
Correct me if I’m wrong Didn’t I see somewhere that iTunes for Windows will stay as it is and plague us ?
The official Apple blurb referred to the new version of the Apple operating system , Catalan or something
I still have to use it get books onto my iPad and music for that matter. I use MC for my iPod
I guessApple regards Windows users as a lower form of life 🤠
Ugh ...
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Hi antenna
Did you know you can sync the older iPods via MC , it’s the iOS devices you can’t, I do it all the time
Have a look in the Wiki
Mines a Classic 160 and an older 80 both sync fine
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I switched over from iTunes to MC quite a few years ago because I wanted more metadata tags to play with. I was constantly tricking iTunes into doing what I wanted by appropriating the meager tags they supported for other functions. But that only goes so far, so the promise of unlimited tags in MC was too much to pass up. But, had I known then about the depth of MC I would have migrated years earlier. Having unlimited library fields to work with is still important but far lower on the list of my favorite features. There are so many exceptional functions and customizeable options in MC. I'm still unpeeling layers of functionality that blow my mind, many years later. For anyone who is interested in curating their own digital music library, it's the best software available. RIP iTunes, and good riddance.
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Thank you for taking the time to say that.