![]() ![]() Tutorial: How to use gtkpod to manage your iPod in UbuntuĪbout: MediaMonkey (free version) includes the following features: Party Mode/Auto-DJ, CD Ripper, audio converter, auto-renamer, album-art lookup, reports and statistics, iPod and MP3 Player support. gtkpod includes the following features: Read your existing iTunesDB, add MP3, WAV, M4A (non-protected AAC), M4B (audio book), podcasts, and various video files, view, add and modify cover art, sync directories, detect duplicates when adding songs, and much more. It supports the first to fifth Generation including the iPod mini, iPod Photo, iPod Shuffle, iPod nano, and iPod Video. Tutorial: How to use Banshee to manage your iPod in UbuntuĪbout: gtkpod is a platform independent Graphical User Interface for Apple’s iPod using GTK2. Banshee is available as a pre-compiled binary for many Linux distributions, and its source is available for those of you who prefer compile your own programs. How to install Amarok in Ubuntu (and get it to play MP3s)Ībout: Banshee includes the following features: Rips music, burn CDs, share your music, displays cover art, tons of plugins, controllable via keyboard shortcuts, smart playlists and the ability to rate your music. ![]() Tutorials: How to use Amarok to manage your iPod in Ubuntu Amarok is available as a pre-compiled binary for many Linux distributions, and its source is available for those of you who prefer compile your own programs. The screenshots are quite likely a bit dated as the various programs have been updated.Ībout: Amarok includes the following features: Album cover detection and downloads, lyrics support, wikipedia integration, contextual information (a quick view on your currently played music, and suggest similar track which you might like), statistics, Last.fm integration, multiple media devices support (Apple iPod, iRiver iFP and T players, Creative Zen and Nomad players, Generic USB players, Generic MTP players). Of these apps, 6 still exist – the four that don’t have been removed from this post. As of V1.013 the Copytrans Drivers Installer product does not warn you if it cannot find/install Quicktime from the iTunes installer set being used.2022 Update: This article was published back in 2007, and quite obviously a lot has changed since then. From iTunes 10.5 onwards Apple no longer bundles Quicktime as part of the iTunes installer (see for details). WARNING: If using the CopyTrans Drivers Installer product with any iTunes installer from version 10.5 upwards then you will need to install Quicktime manually (if it isn't already installed on your system), without Quicktime installed the MediaMonkey iPod/iPhone plugin will not operate correctly. It is a free product from the makers of Copy Trans Manager, and it can be found here: You can install the needed drivers for your iPod Touch, iPhone, or iPad by using the Copy Trans Drivers Installer. UPDATE: The above "hack" is no longer necessary. You can then sync your iPod with Media Monkey without iTunes. Rename it to amds.cab, open that file again with 7Zip, and then extract the. ![]() rsrc directory, opend the RCDATA directory and extract the CABINET file. rsrc directory) and extract AppleMobileDeviceSupport.msi (AppleMobileDeviceSupport64.msi for 64-bit), and QuickTime.msi (Quicktime lite recommended instead)Ĥ.1 iTunes v9.1 - In the. Open up the zipped file (right click 7-zip -> Open Archive, open. Get 7-Zip to extract only what you need from the iTunes installer archive.Ĥ. Download the iTunesSetup.exe (or iTunes64Setup.exe is you're using 64-bit) fileģ. For those who don’t want to install iTunes, there is a hack:ġ. ![]()
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