iTunes 12.7: How to cope with the abrupt changes
Macworld  /  Glenn Fleishman

iTunes 12.7 appeared Tuesday following Apple’s slate of product announcements, 
and its version number hides how much that’s disappeared and changed in this 
release. The iOS App Store is wiped out, as are ringtones. iTunes U and 
Internet Radio have moved locations. And iTunes for Windows lost its ability to 
manage books in iOS.

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The first time you launch iTunes 12.7, it gives you this hilarious bit of fluff 
about the changes made.

While many people have argued iTunes’ feature creep over the years had made it 
an increasingly odd sack of unrelated items, this shift doesn’t come with 
commensurate improvements or additions elsewhere in macOS, and may cause some 
difficulties for people with modest Internet throughput or low bandwidth caps, 
which can affect people across both the developed world (more the U.S. than 
elsewhere) and the developing one.

The biggest hit is to the iOS App Store in iTunes, which was always a strange 
fit. iOS apps were in iTunes, because iTunes was once the only way to manage 
content. But you’ll have to adjust your behavior and find new places to carry 
out activities you might have before. Let’s go through the changes.

What to do about no iOS apps in iTunes 12.7

The App Store in iTunes is kaput and there’s nothing you can do about, so dry 
your tears and let’s move on. Apple doesn’t let it go neatly out the door, 
however. After updating, I found that 5GB of “.ipa” files—the file format for 
apps—remained in my home directory (in ~/Music/iTunes Library/Mobile 
Applications/). You can throw those away unless you’re nostalgic.

If you were used to syncing your apps via iTunes and making purchases in macOS 
to sync back, that capability is now restricted to iOS. You won’t consume more 
bandwidth downloading an app via iOS than macOS—unless you have multiple iOS 
devices syncing the same apps to a single Mac.

Where it will really hurt is if and when you need to restore an iPhone or iPad. 
You can still perform iTunes backups, but the restore won’t transfer apps from 
your Mac, but instead re-download them over the Internet from Apple. That can 
easily consume gigabytes of bandwidth, depending on your app choices. Many 
users download few apps, or those apps that are relatively modest, and this 
won’t be as big a hit.

There’s no way to bypass or minimize this problem. If you have any kinds of 
restrictions on your internet service—whether in performance or limits—you 
should consider using a public Wi-Fi hotspot or the Wi-Fi of a friend without 
those limits. You’ll need to plan ahead when you wipe and want to restore an 
iOS device.

You might wonder what happened to File Transfers, a hack that Apple introduced 
many years ago to allow iOS apps to sync data back and forth with a Mac before 
iCloud Drive, Dropbox, Google Drive, and other methods were readily available. 
It remains: with an iOS device connected, click its icon in the area below the 
playback bar, and then click File Sharing in the navigation list at left.

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File Transfers remains, even though apps are gone.

Other changes in iTunes 12.7

Ringtones are no longer managed as purchases in iTunes, but you can find 
previously downloaded ones and manage those in iTunes. Apple says any 
downloaded ringtones are in the ~/Music/iTunes Library/Tones/ folder. And if 
you select your device in iTunes, you can click the Tones item under On My 
Device to remove and add them.

In iOS 11, coming shortly, Apple will let you re-downloaded previously 
purchased ringtones and manage them directly on the device.

IDG
You can pick what shows up in the music library sidebar, including Internet 
Radio.

iTunes U content was moved to podcasts in iTunes, while Internet Radio is now 
part of the music library sidebar. If you’re not seeing Internet Radio, 
Control-click on the music sidebar, choose Edit List, and check the Internet 
Radio box. (While there, you can opt to include or exclude other items.)

Finally, Windows users will find themselves paging through their version of 
iTunes, trying to find Books. It doesn’t matter how thoroughly you ruffle the 
app: Apple says in a bit of doublespeak, “Books on iTunes for Windows are 
managed in iBooks for iOS.”



Original Article: 
https://www.macworld.com/article/3224531/software-entertainment/itunes-127-how-to-cope-with-the-abrupt-changes.html#tk.rss_all


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