Sync Itunes Library Between Windows And Mac
- Sync Itunes Library Between Windows And Mac Computer
 - Sync Itunes Library To Pc
 - Sync Itunes Library Across Computers
 
Now there's an app for every media type
With macOS Catalina, your music, videos, podcasts, and audiobooks are organized in to their own dedicated apps — the Apple Music app, Apple TV app, Apple Podcasts app, and Apple Books app. You can also access your iTunes Store purchases in these apps.
If you have a PC, you can continue to use iTunes for Windows to manage your media library, make purchases, and manually sync and manage your iPhone, iPad, or iPod touch.
Use Finder to sync and manage your iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch
Finder is the new place to back up, update, or restore your iPhone, iPad, and iPod touch. Just connect your device to your Mac and it appears in the Finder sidebar. And you can easily drag and drop files to your device.
Use Finder to manage your devices.
Upgrade your iTunes library
After you update to macOS Catalina, just open the Apple Music app or Apple TV app to use your iTunes library in the new apps. Have multiple iTunes libraries? Learn how to switch between them in macOS Catalina.
If you open the Apple Podcasts app or Apple Books app first, you won't see any of your media until you open the Apple Music app or Apple TV app.
- If you haven't yet, it's time to join me and put your iTunes library folder into the cloud and sync it to several computers at once—without paying for iTunes Match. Step 1: Get Dropbox If you don't already have a Dropbox account, then get one.
 - Feb 08, 2018 To sync your iOS device wirelessly and automatically with iTunes, make sure iTunes is running on your Mac or Windows PC and then plug your iOS device to a power source. If you are connected to a.
 
Nov 15, 2019 The iTunes Store will still be available to buy music on Mac, iOS, PC, and Apple TV. ITunes Gift Cards and iTunes credits will be maintained and can be used with the new apps and the App Store. IPhone, iPad, and iPod backup, restore, and syncing will move to Finder. Nov 15, 2019 The iTunes Store will still be available to buy music on Mac, iOS, PC, and Apple TV. ITunes Gift Cards and iTunes credits will be maintained and can be used with the new apps and the App Store. IPhone, iPad, and iPod backup, restore, and syncing will move to Finder. As I don't know how to do this on Windows, lets make one on the Mac & copy it over. Open Terminal & enter this touch /Desktop/iTunes Library.itl That will create an empty ITL file on the desktop, broken enough for this. Move this file to your Windows iTunes folder. Launch iTunes.
How to see library folder in mac. Jan 12, 2020 How to Make the Library Visible Permanently. Launch Terminal, located in /Applications/Utilities. Enter the following command at the Terminal prompt: Press Return. Once the command executes, you can quit Terminal. The Library folder will now be visible in the Finder. Should you ever wish to set.
Here are some things to know
Sync Itunes Library Between Windows And Mac Computer
- The Apple Music app and Apple TV app read the contents of your iTunes library — so don't delete your iTunes library.
 - If you open the Apple Music app and don't see all of your album artwork, leave the Apple Music app open so your album artwork can finish downloading.
 - If you previously used multiple iTunes libraries, your audiobooks are imported in to the Apple Books library and podcasts are imported in to the Apple Podcasts library on your computer.
 
Where's my media?
Here's where you can find your entire media collection, access your iTunes Store purchases, and synced libraries.
All of your music is now in the Apple Music app
The Apple Music app is where you can find all of your music, including music that you imported in to iTunes, purchased from the iTunes Store, and playlists and smart playlists that you created in iTunes. And if you subscribe to Apple Music, you can stream and download millions of songs, and access your entire music library across all of your devices.
Explore the Apple Music app.
Looking for the iTunes Store?
If you don't see the iTunes Store in the sidebar, here's how to find it:
- Open the Apple Music app.
 - In the menu bar, choose Music > Preferences.
 - Go to the General tab and select iTunes Store.
 - Click OK.
 
Everything you watch is now in the Apple TV app
The Apple TV app is the new home for all of your movies, TV shows, and home videos — including your purchases from iTunes. Browse movies and TV shows that you can buy, rent movies, and subscribe to just the channels that you want to watch. And soon you can discover new favorites with Apple TV+.
Discover the Apple TV app.
Find podcasts in the Apple Podcasts app
Find all of the shows that you’ve subscribed to or added to iTunes in the Apple Podcasts app. Continue listening to your favorite podcast episodes. And discover new shows that you might like based on the ones that you’re already listening to.
Listen with the Apple Podcasts app.
Listen to audiobooks in the Apple Books app
Find your audiobooks, including the ones that you purchased from iTunes, in the Apple Books app. Discover new books to read in the Book Store. Or buy audiobooks from the new Audiobook Store so you can listen on the go.
Sync Itunes Library To Pc
Check out the Apple Books app.
The Apple Music app, Apple TV app, Apple Podcast app, and Apple Books app aren’t available in all countries and regions. Learn what’s available in your country or region.
Q: I’ve been a Windows PC user since 1994. I recently purchased my first Mac—a late 2011 13” MacBook Pro—that I use primarily like one would use an iPad. I have already copied my music, videos and photos to the Mac but so far I’ve been hesitant to use it for actually syncing my iPhone and iPod classic. Obviously, syncing with a portable, always-on Mac would be more convenient than powering up an old Windows desktop, but I have a couple of concerns…
1. Barring significant price reductions or an increase in my income, it’s highly unlikely that my next computer will be a Mac. Given that a Mac and PC use different hard drive formats, how difficult would it be to batch-move my personal files back to a PC (either from the Mac or from an external backup drive)?
Sync Itunes Library Across Computers
2. I get the impression that Apple goes to greater lengths to protect users from themselves, with the unintended result of locking the user’s data inside Apple’s walled garden. Is this an accurate impression or am I just not familiar with the Apple way of doing things?
I guess what I’m asking is if the convenience of being able to sync with a portable Mac will be worth the hassle of committing hours to learn the ins and outs of an OS that I may never use again should my MacBook need replacing?
– Paul
A: How difficult this will be depends largely on how your music library is organized now and how concerned you are with preserving your own file system organization versus simply letting iTunes organize those files for you.
The first thing to keep in mind is that iTunes is basically the same application on both Mac and Windows. Although there are a few subtle differences, if you’re familiar with the Windows version, you should be able to pick up the Mac version without any difficulty at all. The key problem when moving an iTunes library between the Mac and Windows OS isn’t even the hard drive format (i.e. HFS+ vs NTFS) but rather the way that the two different operating systems refer to the file systems. For example, Windows uses drive letters while Mac OS X uses drive names, Windows uses backslashes () in path names, while OS X uses forward slashes (/) and so forth.
Since iTunes stores the full paths to the media files and apps in your library, this means that you can’t just copy the iTunes library database between a Windows PC and a Mac and expect it to find the files—even if those files are on an external hard drive or network drive that you’re sharing between both machines. Put simply, if iTunes has stored a file in “D:Music” on your Windows PC, Mac OS X won’t have any idea how to actually find that file since it has no idea what “D:Music” means.
However, there actually is a workaround to this problem if iTunes is managing your file system for you. When iTunes cannot locate a file in its specified location it will fall back to looking in the default location for that file—that is, the location where iTunes would normally place the file in your iTunes Media folder during import. By default, your iTunes Media folder is located under your main “iTunes” folder on your internal hard drive—normally under your home “Music” or “My Music” folder. However, you can set the location of your iTunes Media folder to anywhere on your computer, or even on an external hard drive or network share. This option is found under the Advanced tab in your iTunes Preferences.
Also take note of the Copy files to iTunes Media folder when adding to library option in this section; when importing new files into your iTunes library this option determines whether those files are copied into your iTunes Media folder or simply left in their original locations and referenced from there. Note that this only applies to importing existing media files—content you download from the iTunes Store or import from CD will always be placed in the iTunes Media folder regardless of this setting.
Within the iTunes Media folder, iTunes organizes your files into a hierarchical sub-folder structure, with the first level of folders organized by content type (e.g. Music, Movies, TV Shows, etc), and then sub-folders specific to each content type (e.g. Artist/Album for music, Show/Season for TV shows, etc).
As long as everything is in its “proper” location within the iTunes Media folder, then you shouldn’t have any problem migrating your iTunes library between the Windows and Mac OS X operating systems; when iTunes can’t find your files in their specified paths—because those paths have no way of existing on the other OS—then it simply goes and looks in the iTunes Media folder, finds the file where it’s supposed to be, and updates its location. This entire process is transparent; iTunes will simply pick up the files in their new location without any prompts or warnings.
If you haven’t had the Copy files… option enabled in the past, then you may need to “Consolidate” your library to make sure everything is in its default locations. You can find more information on how to do this in our guide to Transferring your iTunes Library. Note that it doesn’t hurt to run the “Consolidate” option anyway if you’re unsure, as it will just leave anything along that’s already properly organized.
In regards to your second question about “lock-in,” the fact is that if you’re already using iTunes on Windows, moving over to the Mac version makes virtually no difference; iTunes is essentially the same application on both platforms, and other than the inherent OS file system differences, your data and files will be stored in the same manner on either operating system. iTunes prefers to organize your files into its own specific folder and naming structure, but the structure it uses is reasonably logical and at the end of the day they’re still just stored as standard files on your hard drive.
Ultimately, moving back to iTunes for Windows should be almost trivial as long as you let iTunes keep your library organized for you. In fact, you could theoretically use an external hard drive and move back and forth regularly between the Windows and Mac versions of iTunes, although it’s probably a better idea just to stick to a single operating system for consistency.