Yes iTunes! Not Apple Music. And my (Classic) iPods.
I mostly listen to music while I’m working on my desktop computer or use an iPod when I am traveling. I’m still able to buy new music on iTunes (and I do). It prompts me to update to a new version of iTunes but I’ve been ignoring the message. I don’t ever want to change. What does the future hold for me? How long will my beautiful Classic iPods, with 18,000 songs on them, keep working?
I’ve kept my MacBook and my iPhone a couple of versions behind, just because I love iTunes.
Yes, I’ve got a couple of iPods (I love my 5th Gen. Nano, because it has FM radio!), but once I saw my daughter skip back 30 sec. while listening to a book on her iPhone, I’m mainly using that.
I still use iTunes. I sometimes wonder if I should switch to streaming, but frankly I don’t really understand it. What do you do if your internet is flaky, or even nonexistent?
Well, I am fully Android for phones, now. No streaming required, though I have Youtube Premium that includes a streaming music service(nice when I don’t own something).
Of course, no Itunes. On Android, you can just drag your music over to the phone like on Windows Explorer. It automatically looks for music in the music folder and that is how I play things.
Does Apple do that now? My memory of my Ipod Touch Gen 4 was that Itunes literally had to manage your music for you. You had to essentially tell Itunes to “add” or “sync” mp3’s to your device.
I go back to DOS and pre OSX Apple and I just want to drag my files over and directly manage things myself. Did Apple ever allow that?
I still use iTunes every day. And my 250 gb Ipod. I have a boatload of music on the iPod and it’s still only half full. My only gripe with iTunes is when you buy a record, sometimes, for whatever reason, you don’t always get every song. (That happened to me with the Rolling Stones at El Mocambo record).
I also still have LPs, CDs, DVDs, and a typewriter. So there.
I seem to recall that you can disable automatic updates on iPods, important if you don’t want to risk losing functionality.
My music listening these days consists mostly of random rock shuffle on an iPod Classic.
It’s a dying form of tech though. Most people don’t want to own music and have their entire library in a convenient portable form; they’d rather rent songs indefinitely, hoping their favorite stuff will always be available.
I still use my iPod classic too, along with iTunes. I have to do all the podcast updating manually on it, and I haven’t added any music since Dickety-six or so but it still does for me most of what I want it to do. It stopped trying to update me a few years ago, as it said it no longer supported my iPod.
So basically I don’t know what’s going on, but I don’t care.
Yeah, I have lots of music on my phone, but there’s just something so handy, and so sensible about being able to listen to my chosen tunes that come from an aluminum wafer the size of a Cheez-it cracker…and without depleting my phone’s battery.
Yeah, never willingly giving up my iPod Classic nor my iPod Touch. One day, they will stop working, and I have no idea what I will do. Until then, they’re my main way of listening to music.
And I have my lessons, coachings, and practice sessions loaded on them as well as conventional music.
If you have no internet access, a streaming service is probably not for you.
Your mobile internet is going to have to be exceptionally flakey if it can’t handle streaming a few songs. But you can still download all the music you want for offline play via your home internet or a free public wifi spot.