entropicdecay Posted July 31, 2007 Share Posted July 31, 2007 Okay, I'm not looking to steal music from everybody's iPods. There. I said it. I'm looking to rescue just about 4500 of my hard-earned songs that I've had since 2003. I actually did this two years ago - transferring music from a windows formatted iPod to my new Powerbook after my PC bit the dust. But that was two years ago and I've forgotten which software I'd used. Now, last night, I tried using one called Senuti. It crashed and I lost 50 or so songs, nothing irreplaceable or important. Heck, I haven't even noticed again. When I finally copy things over, I want to retain my playlists. EDIT: I would like to first copy my iPod to my PC before I forge ahead with my laptop. I need software recommendations. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Katsurugi Posted August 1, 2007 Share Posted August 1, 2007 Though I have copied the text from the article, I suggest going to the link below. It has helpful links to possible sites where you can download different apps to help make this pretty seamless. http://www.mydigitallife.info/2006/07/16/copy-or-transfer-music-and-songs-from-ipod-to-pc-and-computer-without-itunes/ Copy or Transfer Music and Songs from iPod to PC and Computer without iTunes To protect the copyrights of the songs, musics and videos stored on iPod and reduce piracy, Apple has make it difficult to copy or transfer the songs, musics, audio, videos and files that stored on iPod to personal computer (PC) or laptop notebook computer, by scrambling the file names of the songs on the iPod and telling the operating system that the files should be invisible to normal users, without any encryption involved in this iPod anti-copying mechanism. iTunes allows only one-way synchronization of musics from computer to iPod, so if for whatever reasons such as need to reload your library on local hard disk due to desktop hard disk failure or buying new computer, you can easily copy back the video, music and song library from iPod on a Windows PC by following steps: 1. Insert your iPod to a Windows PC USB or FireWire port. (PC should runs Windows XP or other Windows operating system). 2. If your Windows PC still doesn’t have iTunes installed, skip this step. If iTunes is already installed and prompt a message on whether if you’d like to associate this iPod with this computer and deleting its content, click No. Or else you will lose your only copy of library on iTunes. Beside, ensure that ‘Enable Disk Use’ is selected. 3. Open My Computer or Windows Explorer, the iPod should be automatically detected as a portable hard drive. 4. Click on the iPod icon or the iPod portable hard drive letter to open the contents of the drive. 5. If you don’t see a folder called “iPod Control”, it’s hidden and invisible. To unhidden it so that it’s visible, go to Tools -> Folder Options -> View, and then check (enable) the option “Show hidden files and folders.” 6. Open the “iPod Control” folder, and then the Music folder. 7. The Music folder contains the iPod’s music and videos, divided into folders. Copy the library to local computer hard drive’s My Music folder. 8. The files copied have unintelligible four-letter file names. To reveal the names of the songs and other data tags, add the files to the Windows Media Player or iTunes libraries or switch to “Tiles” view in Windows Explorer. 9. Rename the file if necessary. Beside above manual ways to copy and transfer song library from iPod to computer, or import into iTunes, there are several third party program or more commonly called iPod Manager that has the iPod copying function such as SharePod (freeware) or PodPlus (shareware). Similarly, in Macintosh running MacOS X or MacOS 9, it’s harder to show hidden files and folders. So these third party utilities with iPod copying will be useful to transfer files and music from iPod to PC’s hard disk and iTunes library. For MacOS X, try Broken Helix and Rob’s iPod Exporter. For MacOS 9, try escapePod and iProber. Other iPod Manager or iPod song transfer utility for Mac include Senuti, iPodRid, iPod.iTunes and PodWorks. For Linux, try GUIPod. PodUtil will be able to works on both Windows and Mac platform. The transferred music will be playable without any restrictions if the songs are ripped from CDs. If the songs or videos are bought from the iTunes music store, they will play in iTunes after you have “authorize” the computer. To authorize, try playing a purchased file. It will prompt you for your iTunes username and password. Up to five computers can be authorized at any one time. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
entropicdecay Posted August 2, 2007 Author Share Posted August 2, 2007 Hmm... now there's another conundrum. When I read my iPod through Senuti, it says I have 4669 songs. But when I check my iPod, it says I have 4598. Oh well. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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