On May 1, 2010, at 01:56 , Rob Studdert wrote:

On 01/05/2010, steve harley <[email protected]> wrote:

it's a really bad example, since that feature is an option; it may be too helpful in the default, but the default is for people who buy tracks from Apple and rip their own CDs without tweaking the track names; not everything about iTunes suits me but it is one of Apple's more configurable apps and it's also one of the few with a comprehensive AppleScript implementation

I work in radio stations, we don't use iTunes and never will but we
create buckets of audio files. Being forced to use an app like iTunes
sucks and is very indicative of Apples general behaviour IMO.


Who ever said iTunes was for use in radio stations? There's a big ol'stretch trying to find fault with Apple. iTunes is for me to listen to music while I work at the computer, to transfer to my iTouch, or one of several models of iPod I use every day for portable music in my car, at the dog park, to show others the photos or videos I've put together in the past few months. When I buy a CD, or borrow one from a friend or the library, it inevitably finds it's way into my iTunes library. My CDs are played once, then put away, just as my record albums were played once 30 years ago to transfer the sound to both reel to reel and cassette in one operation.

There are plenty of high priced packages for A/V work on the Mac. A professional has no need for iTunes. Ask Hollywood film makers, musicians, recording studios, and so on what platform and software they use to do their work. The answer is preponderantly Mac.

Jeeeez.


Joseph McAllister
[email protected]

http://gallery.me.com/jomac
http://web.me.com/jomac/show.me/Blog/Blog.html







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