| Overview
With the tiny Shuffle, the Nano, the Classic, and the Touch,
Apple's gotten the world hooked on portable music, pictures, videos
-- and the iPod. One thing they haven't delivered, though, is an
easy guide for getting the most from this sleek entertainment
center. Enter iPod: The Missing Manual, 7th Edition -- a
book as breathtaking, satisfying, and reliable as its
subject.
Now in a sleek, travel-friendly size, this new edition provides a
no-nonsense view of iTunes 8 and everything in the latest iPod
line, with crystal-clear explanations, easy-to-follow color
graphics, and guidance on all the amazing things you can do,
including:
Out of the box and into your ears. Find out how to
install iTunes and load music on your iPod. And get advice on
buying copy-protection free songs from stores like Amazon and
Rhapsody. Bopping around the iPod. Learn everything from turning
it on and off to shaking your iPod Nano to shuffle your
tracks. In tune with iTunes. Choose which parts of your iTunes
library loads onto your iPod, move your sacred iTunes Folder to a
bigger hard drive, and add album covers to your collection. Picking playlists like a Genius. Let iTunes' new Genius
feature whip up smart playlists from your library, and suggest
songs from the iTunes Store that fit with what you already
own. The power of the 'Pod. Download movies and TV shows and
learn how to play them on your iPod and finish viewing them on your
TV. Play photo slideshows, find cool podcasts, and more. Welcome to the App Store. Soup up your iPod Touch, from
upgrading to the 2.0 firmware to installing the iTunes Store's
nifty new collection of programs -- including games that turn the
Touch into a pocket 3-D arcade.
Even if you don't buy one of the new iPod models, this Missing
Manual has plenty of information on the latest version of iTunes,
the App Store and a whole lot more about Apple's incredible
device.
Editorial ReviewsProduct DescriptionWith the tiny Shuffle, the Nano, the Classic, and the Touch, Apple's gotten the world hooked on portable music, pictures, videos -- and the iPod. One thing they haven't delivered, though, is an easy guide for getting the most from this sleek entertainment center. Enter iPod: The Missing Manual, 7th Edition -- a book as breathtaking, satisfying, and reliable as its subject. Now in a sleek, travel-friendly size, this new edition provides a no-nonsense view of iTunes 8 and everything in the latest iPod line, with crystal-clear explanations, easy-to-follow color graphics, and guidance on all the amazing things you can do, including: Out of the box and into your ears. Find out how to install iTunes and load music on your iPod. And get advice on buying copy-protection free songs from stores like Amazon and Rhapsody. Bopping around the iPod. Learn everything from turning it on and off to shaking your iPod Nano to shuffle your tracks. In tune with iTunes. Choose which parts of your iTunes library loads onto your iPod, move your sacred iTunes Folder to a bigger hard drive, and add album covers to your collection. Picking playlists like a Genius. Let iTunes' new Genius feature whip up smart playlists from your library, and suggest songs from the iTunes Store that fit with what you already own. The power of the 'Pod. Download movies and TV shows and learn how to play them on your iPod and finish viewing them on your TV. Play photo slideshows, find cool podcasts, and more. Welcome to the App Store. Soup up your iPod Touch, from upgrading to the 2.0 firmware to installing the iTunes Store's nifty new collection of programs -- including games that turn the Touch into a pocket 3-D arcade. Even ifyou don't buy one of the new iPod models, this Missing Manual has plenty of information on the latest version of iTunes, the App Store and a whole lot more about Apple's incredible device. | Amazon.com ReviewHave you recently upgraded to a new iPod--Classic, Nano, Shuffle, or Touch--and want to learn about all the new features? Or, do you just want more information on the latest version of iTunes, the App Store and a whole lot more about Apple's incredible device? If so, you need an easy illustrated guide to get the most out of your sleek little entertainment center. iPod: The Missing Manual will get you rockin' in no time. Preview Tips from iPod: The Missing Manual |
| Set Up Multiple iTunes Libraries Many households have just one computer for the whole family. Wouldn't it be great if everyone had a personal iTunes library? To use multiple libraries, follow these steps: 1.Quit iTunes 2. Hold down the Shift [Option] key on your PC or Mac keyboard and launch iTunes. In the box that pops up, click Create Library and give it a name. | | 3. iTunes opens up, but with a blank library with nothing in it. If you have music in your main library that you want to move over to this one, choose File--> Add to Library. 4. Navigate to the music you want and add it. If the songs are in your original library, they're probably in My Documents-->My Music--> iTunes-->iTunes Music [Home-->Music-->iTunes-->iTunes Music] in folders sorted by Artist name. Choose the files you want and add. To switch between libraries, just hold down the Shift [Option] key when you're starting iTunes, and you'll get a box that lets you pick the one you want. (The program opens the last library if you don't choose one.) Tracks from CDs you rip go into whatever library's open. And now that you have those songs in this library, you can switch back to the other one and get rid of them there. |  | 
| Change a Song's Start and Stop Times Got a song with onstage chitchat before it starts or after the music ends? Fortunately, you don't have to sit there and listen. You can a change a song's start and stop times so you hear only the juicy middle part. As you play the song you want to adjust, observe the iTunes status display window; watch for the point in the timeline where you get bored. Then: 1. Click the track you want to adjust. 2. Choose File-->Get Info to call up the song's information box. 3. Click the Options tab and take a look at the Stop Time box, which shows the full duration of the song. 4. Enter the new stopping point for the song, as you noted earlier. You can perform the exact same trick at the beginning of a song by adjusting the time value in the Start Time box. | | Move the iTunes Music Folder to an External Drive Media libraries grow and hard drives shrink as thousands of song and videos fill up the space. You may be thinking of getting a big external hard drive to use for iTunes storage, and if so, make sure iTunes knows what you intend to do. If you rudely drag the iTunes Music folder to a different place without telling iTunes, it thinks the songs and videos in your collection are gone. The next time you start the program, you'll find it empty. To move the iTunes Music folder to a new drive, just let the program know where you're putting it. Move the folder to the desired location, then, in the Preferences box, click the Advanced icon or tab. In the area labeled "iTunes Music folder location," click the Change button, and navigate to the place where you moved the folder. Finally, click OK. |
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| Make a Genius Playlist in iTunes With the Genius feature, you click any song that you're in the mood for and iTunes brings back a playlist of 25 to 100 songs that it thinks go well with the one you picked. Here's the procedure: 1. Click a song title in your library. 2. Click the Genius button at the bottom of the iTunes window. 3. iTunes presents you with your new playlist in a flash. 4. Use the buttons at the top of the Genius window to adjust the number of songs in the playlist, refresh it with new songs if you want a different mix, and--best of all--save the playlist permanently. | | Make Playlist Folders If you like to have a playlist or five for every occasion, but find your iTunes Source list is getting crowded, iTunes lets you store multiple playlists inside convenient folders. 1. To add a folder to your Source list, click the Source list's Library icon and then choose File-->New Playlist Folder. 2. A new "untitled folder" appears, inviting you to change it's name to something more original. 3. Drag any playlists you want to store inside the folder onto its icon. If the whole family shares one computer, folders can give each person a tidy receptacle to store his or her personal playlists. Folders are also great for storing a bunch of playlists that go well together. That way, when you select the folder and hit play, iTunes plays all the folder's songs consecutively. |
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Reader Reviews From Amazon (Ranked by 'Helpfulness') Average Customer Rating: based on 14 reviews. New Ipod User, 2009-05-28 Reviewer rating: I purchased a ipod (finally broke down) and knew nothing about using the ipod. I found this book and boy am I glad I did. This book not only helped me use my ipod but gave me a lot of helpful tips. I love this book and am very glad I did. | Good, but not amazing, 2009-04-22 Reviewer rating: This book was helpful, but wasn't everything I was expecting based on how its advertised. But I'm still glad I ordered it. | Should be called iTunes and iPod Missing Manual, 2009-04-19 Reviewer rating: Even though the word iTunes is missing from the book's title, it covers the software more than it does iPod, which is unfortunate because, truth be told, the 6G iPods and the iPod touch are both powerful and confusing. (There're also a lot of bugs to the iPod's software, such as the inability to correctly display TV Shows' release dates.) The very basics of iPodding is covered in this book, but otherwise it just talks about iTunes, iTunes, iTunes. Since iPod and iTunes are tightly integrated with one another, I wouldn't have complained, except in this book the iPod coverage is just too little and too shallow.
Also, in terms of writing style, the book is wordy, just like articles in the New York Times for which the authors write. Also, the authors keep playing sycophants to Apple and Steve Jobs, which is annoying. Just give me the straight facts about how to use the iPod, man (and woman)!
A lot of iPod operations are left unexplained. For instance, how do you keep the photos organized so they get sync'ed correctly? (FYI, the iPod can only read one level of folder structure.) Also, what does the "Remember position" checkbox mean for a song? (The iPod seems to remember a song's position regardless of this setting.) How about this one: if I rate a song in iTunes and rate it differently on the iPod, which one gets kept during sync? There're many other such useful topics the book, in its 7th edition, does not cover. There're also a few editorial errors.
In short, I found the iPod coverage in this book way too limited -- and what's covered is also too shallow. Twenty bucks is a lot to charge for a book that, for both iPod and iTunes, pretty much just reproduces Apple's help files. | Superb, Almost Indispensable, "Manual", 2009-03-30 Reviewer rating: A hallmark of the iPod from the start has always been its simplicity: a logical menu system and a nimble thumb brought you hours of your favorite music in a neat, small package. But the "start" was over 7 years ago, and there have been many models and many changes, some subtle, some huge (e.g. wi-fi!). Today the flagship device, the iPod Touch, is still intuitive, but it really does need a manual, and this is it. Every model from the Touch to the Shuffle is covered by the authors with the appropriate level of detail and with copious humor. Highly recommended! | knowledge is power, 2009-03-05 Reviewer rating: Lots of useful info for a new ipod user. Easy to understand and follow. Wish the Ipod came with this book! |
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