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Removing iTunes duplicates

Sean Lynch | June 15, 2008

I recently had to rebuild my iTunes library to solve some weird situation that was preventing my iPhone from syncing with iTunes after a reformat and upgrade. In the process I managed to add about 25 albums to the library twice. Instead of Apple noticing that the action is simply going to result in byte-for-byte duplicates of entire albums, it decides to continue with the addition and just append ” 1.mp3″ to all of the filenames. Why the genius coders over at Apple decided this was a reasonable outcome I’ll never know, but it frustrates a music library neat freak like myself to no end.

After trying to convince various AppleScripts to make iTunes clean itself up, I stumbled across these instructions on the blog of Todd George on how to find and remove byte-for-byte duplicates from iTunes. It saved my sanity. Note that this simply removes the files from the filesystem, and not the entries from the iTunes library itself. Thankfully, Todd provides a link to a great method of finding the now dead entries in your library and removing them WITHOUT any additional scripts or programs.

iTunes is happy again!

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Apple, How-to
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hacks, How-to, iTunes
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Why iTunes should be genuinely concerned about Amazon

Sean Lynch | October 1, 2007

A proper review of the Amazon music store is en route, but I wanted to separate the review of where it is now and where I think it’s going to be.

Amazon’s not building a music store so much as a platform. All of the elements are now in place to allow anyone to set up a simple music store interface that can be accessed by millions.

  • S3 – Amazon’s “in the cloud” storage service provides storage for any MP3 store owner’s collection.
  • FPS – Amazon’s online payment system geared specifically towards micro transactions let store owners charge as much or as little as they want.
  • MP3 Download Portal – The store front, complete with search, previews, and reviews.

You don’t even need to think of store owners on the scale of labels. A band can simply open up shop on Amazon and start selling their wares to interested fans, right along side the big names without having to reinvent the architecture.

The only stumbling block Amazon may face is the link between the website and the media player application. Amazon’s download manager is a good first step, but it needs to integrate further into all popular media player applications not just iTunes. Winamp, Amarok, Windows Media Player, and Songbird all come to mind. The less the user has to be concerned about the transition from purchase click to listen, the more likely they’ll click at all.

If Amazon positions itself correctly, it could do what so many online music stores before it couldn’t: Actually compete with iTunes.

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Business
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Amazon, Apple, iTunes, MP3, Music, Music store, S3
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