So the latest update to MacOS zapped iTunes and replaced it with the new Music app, which essentially seems to be iTunes with everything removed except music.
So what happened to all my other media? My home movies, my TV shows, my movies, my audiobooks? Where did they go? How do I access them?
In Mojave, if I plug in my phone or iPod, everything is synchronized via iTunes. How does that work in the new OS? Surely I’m not synchronizing multiple times for different media?
Edit: I see Nonsuch answered the question, thanks.
Right on; thanks for the clarification, Nonsuch. I really only have music on my iPhone and iPad, and I’m still using iTunes on my 2008 Mac Pro (which runs OS X 10.11.16), so I have no experience with current syncing.
Your iDevice now appears in the Finder sidebar like any other mounted volume. The sync interface looks like it did in iTunes, now with tabs for music, audiobooks, movies, photos etc., with sync parameters configurable for each media type.
Oh, so you DO get to see all your stuff together? Even if it’s in the Finder, that’s better than always fractured into different apps.
That’s what’s kept me from upgrading (for quite a while)… I really like iTunes. I’ve got playlists with music and spoken word/audiobooks together, and I love backing up and sync’ing exactly what I want.
Playlists with music and audiobooks together might not work in the new app paradigm, unless you converted your audiobooks to mp3 (or similar) and imported them into Music as music tracks.
Thanks, that gives me hope. Though I’m still running High Sierra and iTunes 12.8, thinking I’ll update when I really have to. Everything’s running swimmingly for now…
By the way, I’m not mad at Apple, I read it was the EU that wanted iTunes broken up (not clear why, monopoly fears, maybe).
Also still running High Sierra, and I have a different sort of question:
Can I update to latest version and still stay out of the Cloud? I sometimes get knocked offline altogether for some time and want both documents and apps to remain in my own storage and to be functional offline.
Also, will I still have TextEdit? I like TextEdit.
I think you misunderstand how iCloud works. Assuming that you have enough disk space for all your files, all iCloud does is store a mirror copy of all your files. All your files are still kept on your local machine, you work on them locally exactly as you do now whether online or offline. They just synchronize to iCloud when you are online. It can store some files in the cloud only, but that’s only if you run out of disk space.
The synchronization works perfectly in my experience, and it brings in extremely useful functionality. I have two identical laptops, and I can work on either one, with all the files synchronizing seamlessly. And if I don’t have my laptop with me, I can download any file that’s on my laptop onto my phone.