Re: itunes burning a cd after purchasing

2011-10-21 Thread Paul Erkens
Hi Esther,
As always, this answer is helpful and thorough. I did not know about the column 
browser, and I still haven't quite gotten it to work, but I'm now carrying out 
each step you described, and playing around with each phase, to get to know 
iTunes. Thanks to you both, Nectarios I forgot how your name is spelled, and 
Esther, for your explanations.
Paul.
On Oct 20, 2011, at 8:38 PM, Esther wrote:

 Hi Paul and Nektarios,
 
 Paul, if these are your first purchases made with iTunes on your Mac, the 
 tracks will already appear in two playlists that iTunes keeps the Sources 
 table named Purchased (under the Store heading) and Recently Added 
 smart playlist under the Playlists heading.  The Purchased playlist 
 contains all the (non-app) items you have purchased from the iTunes Store 
 from your computer, listed in time order.  The Recently Added smart 
 playlist contains all tracks (excluding podcast subscriptions and apps) that 
 were added to your iTunes library in the last two weeks.
 
 So an easy way to create a playlist of each album that you can burn to audio 
 CD is to select one of these playlists in your sources table, then navigate 
 to the search text field with the Command-Option-f shortcut, and type in the 
 name of the album to filter the results to only include matches.  If you now 
 navigate to the songs table, you'll find either the purchased tracks or the 
 recently added tracks that correspond to the album title you typed in.  Use 
 Command-A to select all, and then use Command-Shift-N to create a new 
 playlist from your selection, and assign the playlist a name of your 
 choosing.  You can now burn this playlist to a CD by selecting the File 
 menu from the iTunes menu bar and choosing the Burn Playlist to Disc menu 
 option.  Select the radio button for Audio CD as the format in the Dialog 
 window.
 
 However, a better way to create an album playlist is to use the Column 
 browser, as Nektarios suggested.  Select your Music folder in the sources 
 table and then press Command-B to toggle the browser on.  Depending on what 
 options you have checked for it to display under your View menu in the 
 Column browser submenu, you can select alphabetically ordered matches to 
 genre, artist, and album.   The search text field filter matches all fields, 
 but the column browser lets you find only album titles, or display all albums 
 by a given artist, for example, by first selecting the artist and then 
 examining the list of albums.  When you select an album in the column 
 browser, you can also use the Command-Shift-N New playlist from selection 
 shortcut to generate a playlist. Furthermore, the tracks will probably be 
 ordered the way you want them, without your having to sort them by album or 
 track number.  And if you want to find specific tracks within a selected 
 Album or Artist field, you can also use the Search text field to type in 
 additional search terms to match, which will show up in the songs table.  As 
 with all other entries in the iTunes sources and songs table, you can move to 
 selections in the column browsers lists either by using your arrow keys or by 
 typing the first few letters of the entry.  Pressing another Command-B 
 toggles the browser back again to hidden.
 
 The combination of the column browser and the search text field is a very 
 powerful yet simple way to quickly locate content in a large music library, 
 and will answer most of your needs.  The next step up is learning how to 
 create and use smart playlists, that let you apply rules for selecting your 
 playlist contents, so that you can do things like create a playlist of all 
 tracks by a given artist that were added to your library within the last 6 
 months, that you rated 4 star or higher, and that you haven't listened to 
 within the last two weeks. You can also specify that the playlist be no 
 longer than 30 minutes (because you want it to fit in the time for a gym 
 workout), and to prioritize selection to those tracks that were least 
 frequently listened to.
 
 HTH.  Cheers,
 
 Esther
 
 On Oct 20, 2011, at 02:57, Nektarios Mallas wrote:
 
 I am not sure what you are trying to do here. 
 If you have the column browser enabled and display all your albums, all you 
 have to do is to locate your specific album and then all your tracks will be 
 there. 
 
 Nektarios.
 
 On Oct 20, 2011, at 3:49 PM, Paul Erkens wrote:
 
 Dear listers,
 
 I just bought 2 albums from the itunes store. it is much easier to do than 
 I thought it would be, even being a VoiceOver user. I would like to burn 
 these to CD's. I googled and this is what I found so far. I need to create 
 a playlist, add the tracks I want, and then burn. This works, but to do it 
 right, you need to select exactly those tracks you want to burn. Isn't 
 there an easier way to transfer the album in its entirety to a cd, because 
 after buying, itunes knows which tracks it contains? Just wondering. Every 
 time I work with itunes 

itunes burning a cd after purchasing

2011-10-20 Thread Paul Erkens
Dear listers,

I just bought 2 albums from the itunes store. it is much easier to do than I 
thought it would be, even being a VoiceOver user. I would like to burn these to 
CD's. I googled and this is what I found so far. I need to create a playlist, 
add the tracks I want, and then burn. This works, but to do it right, you need 
to select exactly those tracks you want to burn. Isn't there an easier way to 
transfer the album in its entirety to a cd, because after buying, itunes knows 
which tracks it contains? Just wondering. Every time I work with itunes and I 
get to know it better as time goes by, I'm starting to like it more. What else 
could you do to organize a fantastically large library of music, films, 
podcasts and so on? I think Apple did a good job with itunes and making it so 
accessible on the mac, and it isn't bad either on windows. But for my question, 
just after purchasing, can I burn that right away, or is the playlist a must 
do, step?
Paul.

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Re: itunes burning a cd after purchasing

2011-10-20 Thread Nektarios Mallas
I am not sure what you are trying to do here. 
If you have the column browser enabled and display all your albums, all you 
have to do is to locate your specific album and then all your tracks will be 
there. 

Nektarios.

On Oct 20, 2011, at 3:49 PM, Paul Erkens wrote:

 Dear listers,
 
 I just bought 2 albums from the itunes store. it is much easier to do than I 
 thought it would be, even being a VoiceOver user. I would like to burn these 
 to CD's. I googled and this is what I found so far. I need to create a 
 playlist, add the tracks I want, and then burn. This works, but to do it 
 right, you need to select exactly those tracks you want to burn. Isn't there 
 an easier way to transfer the album in its entirety to a cd, because after 
 buying, itunes knows which tracks it contains? Just wondering. Every time I 
 work with itunes and I get to know it better as time goes by, I'm starting to 
 like it more. What else could you do to organize a fantastically large 
 library of music, films, podcasts and so on? I think Apple did a good job 
 with itunes and making it so accessible on the mac, and it isn't bad either 
 on windows. But for my question, just after purchasing, can I burn that right 
 away, or is the playlist a must do, step?
 Paul.
 
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 MacVisionaries group.
 To post to this group, send email to macvisionaries@googlegroups.com.
 To unsubscribe from this group, send email to 
 macvisionaries+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
 For more options, visit this group at 
 http://groups.google.com/group/macvisionaries?hl=en.
 

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Re: itunes burning a cd after purchasing

2011-10-20 Thread Esther
Hi Paul and Nektarios,

Paul, if these are your first purchases made with iTunes on your Mac, the 
tracks will already appear in two playlists that iTunes keeps the Sources table 
named Purchased (under the Store heading) and Recently Added smart 
playlist under the Playlists heading.  The Purchased playlist contains all 
the (non-app) items you have purchased from the iTunes Store from your 
computer, listed in time order.  The Recently Added smart playlist contains 
all tracks (excluding podcast subscriptions and apps) that were added to your 
iTunes library in the last two weeks.

So an easy way to create a playlist of each album that you can burn to audio CD 
is to select one of these playlists in your sources table, then navigate to the 
search text field with the Command-Option-f shortcut, and type in the name of 
the album to filter the results to only include matches.  If you now navigate 
to the songs table, you'll find either the purchased tracks or the recently 
added tracks that correspond to the album title you typed in.  Use Command-A to 
select all, and then use Command-Shift-N to create a new playlist from your 
selection, and assign the playlist a name of your choosing.  You can now burn 
this playlist to a CD by selecting the File menu from the iTunes menu bar and 
choosing the Burn Playlist to Disc menu option.  Select the radio button for 
Audio CD as the format in the Dialog window.

However, a better way to create an album playlist is to use the Column browser, 
as Nektarios suggested.  Select your Music folder in the sources table and 
then press Command-B to toggle the browser on.  Depending on what options you 
have checked for it to display under your View menu in the Column browser 
submenu, you can select alphabetically ordered matches to genre, artist, and 
album.   The search text field filter matches all fields, but the column 
browser lets you find only album titles, or display all albums by a given 
artist, for example, by first selecting the artist and then examining the list 
of albums.  When you select an album in the column browser, you can also use 
the Command-Shift-N New playlist from selection shortcut to generate a 
playlist. Furthermore, the tracks will probably be ordered the way you want 
them, without your having to sort them by album or track number.  And if you 
want to find specific tracks within a selected Album or Artist field, you can 
also use the Search text field to type in additional search terms to match, 
which will show up in the songs table.  As with all other entries in the iTunes 
sources and songs table, you can move to selections in the column browsers 
lists either by using your arrow keys or by typing the first few letters of the 
entry.  Pressing another Command-B toggles the browser back again to hidden.

The combination of the column browser and the search text field is a very 
powerful yet simple way to quickly locate content in a large music library, and 
will answer most of your needs.  The next step up is learning how to create and 
use smart playlists, that let you apply rules for selecting your playlist 
contents, so that you can do things like create a playlist of all tracks by a 
given artist that were added to your library within the last 6 months, that you 
rated 4 star or higher, and that you haven't listened to within the last two 
weeks. You can also specify that the playlist be no longer than 30 minutes 
(because you want it to fit in the time for a gym workout), and to prioritize 
selection to those tracks that were least frequently listened to.

HTH.  Cheers,

Esther

On Oct 20, 2011, at 02:57, Nektarios Mallas wrote:

 I am not sure what you are trying to do here. 
 If you have the column browser enabled and display all your albums, all you 
 have to do is to locate your specific album and then all your tracks will be 
 there. 
 
 Nektarios.
 
 On Oct 20, 2011, at 3:49 PM, Paul Erkens wrote:
 
 Dear listers,
 
 I just bought 2 albums from the itunes store. it is much easier to do than I 
 thought it would be, even being a VoiceOver user. I would like to burn these 
 to CD's. I googled and this is what I found so far. I need to create a 
 playlist, add the tracks I want, and then burn. This works, but to do it 
 right, you need to select exactly those tracks you want to burn. Isn't there 
 an easier way to transfer the album in its entirety to a cd, because after 
 buying, itunes knows which tracks it contains? Just wondering. Every time I 
 work with itunes and I get to know it better as time goes by, I'm starting 
 to like it more. What else could you do to organize a fantastically large 
 library of music, films, podcasts and so on? I think Apple did a good job 
 with itunes and making it so accessible on the mac, and it isn't bad either 
 on windows. But for my question, just after purchasing, can I burn that 
 right away, or is the playlist a must do, step?
 Paul.
 

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