Category: Rants


iTunes Match is… interesting

I’ve had iTunes Match turned on for the better part of 24 hours now. There is some really awesome stuff in it, and there’s some not so awesome stuff that leaves me scratching my head a little. First, however, the awesome:

  1. The matching is actually pretty quick
  2. Playlists from the machine running iTunes match are visible everywhere
  3. Playlists from the machine running iTunes match are editable everywhere
  4. It appears that you can “stream” music to the other computers without saving a copy on disk

This is great. I can listen to the music I own on CD at work, without bringing the CD’s to the office (to explain to the copyright officers if something were to go badly), without saving tracks of unknown origin to my computer, etc. Even if I do download something to have offline, it has my Apple ID embedded in it, so there’s no real issue there. And it’s the dream of finally being able to edit and change playlists from multiple computers at once. iTunes Match is living up to all of it’s hype…

…other than a few, small issues. First, if you have more than 25,000 items in your library, you apparently can’t turn iTunes Match on, at all. It’s not an issue of “you can sync the first 25K”, you can’t use the service. Second, there’s a lot of hit-and-miss going on. Random tracks from the Beatles album Rubber Soul didn’t match – and have to be uploaded. (Actually, about 1/3 of all my Beatles tracks didn’t match) And finally, badly named tracks don’t get renamed. I’ve got a lot of music I ripped by hand, before the CDDB was really available. So the track names reflect my naming convention at the time. ’01.name.of.song.mp3′ or ’02_Name of the Song[Live].mp3′ or ‘Track 03.mp3′ are common. And none of these get cleaned up, even when they are matched by iCloud. It would be SO nice if I could get iTunes to rename them now, and give me clean ID3 tags. But, alas.

So I paid for TuneUp to do the same work for me.

Google+ and Domain Accounts

Looks like I spoke too soon: Google has announced that Google Profiles (and Google+) will be available for Apps customers in the next few days. Of course, we’ve been told similar stories in the past, so I’m skeptical that we’ll actually see this happen. (When you say in March that Google Profiles will be available for Apps customers in the next “couple of months”, please remember that 7 months isn’t a couple.)

Google Reader and Google Plus

Google Reader is about to be “brought closer” to Google+, which means that anyone using a Google Apps For The Domain account is pretty much out of luck. This includes yours truly, with dezendorf.com being a Google account for some time now. Months ago, Google started telling us through blog posts that Google Profiles and the services that depend on Profiles (like Google+) are coming “real soon now.” We keep waiting, and Google keeps rolling out new major products, and we don’t get to play in the sandbox. It’s good to know that people who are paying for personal Google Apps for Domain accounts are 8 months behind in getting major feature upgrades, as compared to the free gmail.com accounts.

Just saying.

I’ve gotten a number of irritating SMS Spam messages recently, delivered to my cell phone. I have an unlimited SMS plan at the moment, so it doesn’t cost me anything, but it does eat up my time. And dammit, people who send SPAM are one circle of hell above patent trolls, so if we can stop them, we should.

It turns out to be very easy to report SMS Spam: in the US there is an SMS shortcode (7726, or SPAM on a traditional keypad). Forward the content of the SPAM to that message, and your cell provider should then ask for the number that sent you the message. Considering the CAN-SPAM Act has a minimum fine of $1.00 for each and every instance…

I don’t even care about the money. I just want the damn messages to stop.

Click2Plugin

Marc Hoyois is my new hero.

Safari 5.1 has a different plugin model than previous versions, and has totally broken the one thing I install on my systems that could be considered a Haxie: Click2Flash. Click2Flash gets in-between the browser and the Flash plugin, and prevents it from loading until the user clicks on the Flash object embedded in the web page. This keeps a lot of irritating stuff from auto-starting (hello talking ads!), and keeps my browser performance from sucking too badly.

Marc has released a Safari Extension that does much the same thing as the old plugin, and he has appropriately named it Click2Plugin. Marc, you rock my world. Thank you.