I hear you're throwing out a red herring, too. It's starting to really stink up the thread. Please put it back in the scum-infested pond it came from.Stark wrote:Oh man, so much hilarious nerdnoise. I hear AAC might give you problems, even though it's better and smaller than MP3s and so ubiquitous even fucking 360s support it. Stay away from that h.264/mp4 stuff too, because shitty $20 devices from Singapore don't support it! Stay with xvid. Even better, stay with MPEG2.
When did I ever say this? I even stated that iTunes has its uses for people who needed it. When did I ever argue that media libraries are superbly inferior to file management? I use a damn media library myself, you know, mp3tag. What I said was dragging/dropping could be about as convenient as managing the iTunes database due to it being similar to how regular Windows file operations work. To which I was told that wasn't necessarily true, and which I already conceded.Stark wrote:I love that after all the noise gets demolished, they just come back with 'wah I don't like it'. So, why the dishonestly? I have an extremely strong technical background, and once upon a time back in the 90s I managed media the hard/manual way. Then they invented 'media jukebox' software, which grew into our current 'media library' stuff. All it takes is the ability to learn and it makes managing media easier; but it turns out learning and change is too hard for most people. The fact that it does everything my mum needs it to do without confusing her with 'files' and 'paths' is of course irrelevant. Not liking something is a perfectly good reason not to use it; it's a terrible reason to lie about a bunch of shit you don't know fuck-all about to try to talk someone out of using it. After all, I hear iTunes can't help you tag your music? LOL!
Great way of misrepresenting and twisting my words. Read the fucking topic before you try and comment on what I say, moron.
I've had experience with iTunes before. I didn't like it. However, I did admit it had its uses for some people, and thus should still be included...but I stated it would be best-used as a side program. Instead of it being absolutely fucking required to use the device. You know, I'm not going to repeat myself. Go and read what I posted real carefully before you make another idiotic and uninformed comment.Stark wrote:Anyone who shits on something 'cool' to hate like iTunes, spits out a bunch of easily countered nonsense arguments, has obviously barely even used it and then runs away while saying 'wah I just don't like it' is a dishonest coward. Is it really that hard to learn new ways of doing things? The idea that it's easier to use one app to buy media and another to deliver it to the device than have an integrated store is so utterly retarded that I honestly can't think of anything to say.
I don't know, I thought putting soundtracks in appropriate genre/band/album directories would be good enough. Not to mention the labeling, which you know, mp3 players use for their databases instead of reading the raw directory structure, and any tagging program could handle perfectly. But hey, like I said, to each their own. If you like iTunes, so be it, use it all you want. And my old Zen did a nice job at a good speed in its recordkeeping. I know this because when said Zen once hit the ground and shut itself off, it had to re-index its contents, and that took way under a half-minute. What's more, this only happened once! This slowness you speak of, what is it?Beowulf wrote:I've got a computer with hundreds of MIPS of processing power and a terabyte of space. Why the fuck should I try to remember where everything is? The computer is better at that than I am.
As for your MP3 player automatically reading the ID3 tags and populating it's own internal database: that's retarded. It'd take forever, because both the processor is slow, and the disk is slow. There's a reason why the iPod is one of the few that allows you to play by genre.
And the iPod being...one of few that allows you to play by genre? What's your definition of few? Microsoft's Zune, Creative's Zen, Sandisk's Sansa, and basically the majority of first-world mp3 players out there do that. It's as simple as reading the fucking tags. You know, you can't throw stones at other people if you haven't even looked at recent technology from, oh, the last 3 years.