Sharing I-Tunes
#1
Posted 02 September 2004 - 07:43 AM
Thanks,
HRF
#3
Posted 02 September 2004 - 08:57 AM
HRF
#4
Posted 02 September 2004 - 09:14 AM
G
#5
Posted 02 September 2004 - 09:21 AM
#6
Posted 02 September 2004 - 10:39 AM
HRF
#8
Posted 02 September 2004 - 11:05 AM
OK, I figured it out. I was able to drag a bunch of songs into the "drop box" of his "public" folder. Then I just logged in under his user name, and dragged them into his I-Tunes Library. Now he'll have plenty of songs to load onto his new i-pod. Thanks to all for your assistance.
I was just about to pop in here and suggest that. That's what I would do -- just make sure to uncheck the "copy to music folder when adding to library" so you don't have multiple copies of the songs on the hard drive.
By the way, I'm curious as to what kind of music this is -- I sorta got hooked on classic rock and oldies through my dad, but I don't know too many people who listen to the same music as their parents. All my friends listen to modern stuff, but as the immortal Bob Seger song goes, "I like that old time rock and roll!". /forums/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/grin.gif
#9
Posted 02 September 2004 - 11:49 AM
#10
Posted 02 September 2004 - 12:04 PM
I actually have my entire music library in the Shared folder, and I've made aliases of the library and placed them in each of my User folders on the machine...
Works great, and all users can have the same songs!- only catches are that if someone deletes or adds a song, EVERYONE is affected and you also have to close down iTunes under one user before you can open it under another...
No biggie for me, but some might not like the limitations...
#11
Posted 02 September 2004 - 12:10 PM
Its been some time since running Jaguar, but is 'Drop-Box' the same as Shared
Nope. Here's a mini-primer:
"Shared" folder - a folder in the /Users directory which allows for file exchanges between all users. If you stick a text file in there, for example, anyone can read and edit it.
Public folder - a folder that each user has in their home folder. Users can read from (not write to) the contents of each other's public folders. For example, if I stick a document in my public folder, anyone can see it by going to /Users/(my username/Public, but only I can edit it.
Drop Box - each user has a drop box inside their public folder. Anyone can add a file to the drop box, but only the owner open it or see its contents. Think of it as sending an e-mail -- you create or edit a file, then drop it in another user's drop box, but once you drop it, you can no longer get it back or delete it. Probably most useful in offices.
Hope that helps.
#12
Posted 02 September 2004 - 12:11 PM
only catches are that if someone deletes or adds a song, EVERYONE is affected
Right. If those songs had been in your Public folder, only you can make changes -- so if you don't want people deleting your files, keep them in Public and others can only play them, not change them.
#13
Posted 02 September 2004 - 04:14 PM
HRF



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