I know people like to bag Microsoft for a lot of things, but with the music 
licensing the ball is solely in the content providers. They make it extremely 
hard for companies like Microsoft, Netflix, etc to provide content everywhere.

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On 
Behalf Of Stephen Price
Sent: Monday, April 11, 2011 8:44 PM
To: ozDotNet
Subject: Re: [OT] Windows 7 and Parallel port card

Good luck with that.

I find best way is to remove all songs and re add the folder. It all depends if 
your music is IN the iTunes folder or if you added it from another folder (and 
let iTunes copy what if converts into its own folder). If you have bought music 
via iTunes then it will be a mix of both.
If you don't then you end up with a mix of broken links and duplicate songs. 
You can make it not show duplicates but they are still there.

You'd think with all their UX experience they'd have figured this shit out. I'm 
also stuck in a world of using Zune and getting the two to play nice together. 
Most of my songs are other peoples and I don't like them anyway so I'm forever 
pressing skip. I think I'm just going to delete the whole lot and start over.

On another rant, I'd be buying music through Zune if Microsoft ever got off 
their fat lazy arses and made it available to Australia. Stupid bloody 
licensing lawyers. *grumble grumble*
In the US people pay $15 a month for unlimited access to songs, and a bunch of 
songs they can keep from what you download. I'm happy to PAY for my music but 
they don't want my money. They'd rather I went to Apple and suffered their 
iTunes store.
*glare*
On Tue, Apr 12, 2011 at 11:34 AM, Greg Keogh 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Chaps, two of you have already found that my friend's EPSON doesn't have 
drivers and is even on the not supported lists. So that solves that. I rang my 
friend and gave him the bad news. As Corneliu says, and as I said to my friend 
... new well featured colour printers are really cheap these days. The thing to 
beware of is the cost of consumables. He spent $600 on the box, $90 on a USB 
drive, $8 on a new mouse, $12 on the parallel card that doesn't work, so now he 
spends a bit more on a new printer! Your wallet has a slow leak.

We've got another stupid problem now. I copied his complete My Documents (and 
music and pictures) over to the new box and we installed the latest iTunes. 
When it starts it comes up with a complete list of music from the old machine 
and every file is "broken" because the physical locations don't match. So now 
I've got to find a way of clearing iTunes of all music and refreshing it from 
disk. There is no obvious way to do this and the Apple style menus are foreign 
and ambiguous (Delete, Clear?). I suppose there is a "database" behind iTunes 
that I can delete and cause a rescan?!

Sheesh! How do normal suburban carbon blobs migrate to a new machine. I've 
spent about 6 man-hours with my friend. I'm helping him get his email migrated 
from Outlook Express to Outlook (it hit size limits), his cable modem wasn't 
recognised (you have you power it off and on), his printer is outdated (my 
fault for not checking on this), Kodak EasyShare photo links are all broken 
like iTunes, and so on...

Greg

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