Forums
New posts
Articles
Product Reviews
Policies
FAQ
Log in
Register
What's new
Search
Search
Search titles only
By:
New posts
Menu
Log in
Register
Install the app
Install
Forums
General Discussions
Switcher Hangout (Windows to Mac)
Does my mini have an audio compressor/limiter
JavaScript is disabled. For a better experience, please enable JavaScript in your browser before proceeding.
You are using an out of date browser. It may not display this or other websites correctly.
You should upgrade or use an
alternative browser
.
Reply to thread
Message
<blockquote data-quote="bobtomay" data-source="post: 1301443" data-attributes="member: 24160"><p>iTunes does not require you to have all your music on your local drive. My MacBook Air certainly does not have room for my media which is currently about 4 TB worth and all sits on RAID1 external drives which are attached via eSATA to my Win7 box.</p><p></p><p>Open up iTunes - on the Menu bar go to iTunes - Preferences - Advanced tab - uncheck both of those top 2 boxes - "Keep iTunes media...organized" and "Copy files to..."</p><p></p><p>There is no such thing as a "C:/" drive in OS X. I personally like to use the term "system drive" (or partition) since it carries across all the OSs.</p><p></p><p>You'll find there are quite a few around here with a similar experience to yours. I started on the game players in the 70s, of which the Intellivision was my favorite. Moved to the TI-99-4A around '81, to the Comm 64 & 128, to x86 around the DOS and MS DOS 6 days, to building my own rigs, to overclocking beginning with one of the best overclocking chips of the day - the great AMD 100 Mhz CPU.</p><p></p><p>And you're right, it takes some getting use to for those of us use to tweaking the bejeezus out of our Windows rigs to let go of that mindset.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="bobtomay, post: 1301443, member: 24160"] iTunes does not require you to have all your music on your local drive. My MacBook Air certainly does not have room for my media which is currently about 4 TB worth and all sits on RAID1 external drives which are attached via eSATA to my Win7 box. Open up iTunes - on the Menu bar go to iTunes - Preferences - Advanced tab - uncheck both of those top 2 boxes - "Keep iTunes media...organized" and "Copy files to..." There is no such thing as a "C:/" drive in OS X. I personally like to use the term "system drive" (or partition) since it carries across all the OSs. You'll find there are quite a few around here with a similar experience to yours. I started on the game players in the 70s, of which the Intellivision was my favorite. Moved to the TI-99-4A around '81, to the Comm 64 & 128, to x86 around the DOS and MS DOS 6 days, to building my own rigs, to overclocking beginning with one of the best overclocking chips of the day - the great AMD 100 Mhz CPU. And you're right, it takes some getting use to for those of us use to tweaking the bejeezus out of our Windows rigs to let go of that mindset. [/QUOTE]
Verification
How many occurrences of a n-u-m-b-e-r between "d" and "f" in this example...(sdgs6ngklu3gd#f9%)?
Post reply
Forums
General Discussions
Switcher Hangout (Windows to Mac)
Does my mini have an audio compressor/limiter
Top