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Set your iPod to manually manage music;
But the good way is to transfer all existing songs/videos from your iPod back to your new computer and iTunes. Simply use this handy transfer program called Tansee iPod Transfer
http://www.gutensoft.com/Utilities/Tansee-iPod-Transfer.htm
Many of my friends are using it for its easy and safe transfer.
With just a few simple clicks, it will help you copy all videos/songs from iPod back to your selected folder on your new computer, and then you can easily add those files back to iTunes.
More importantly, this won't overwrite any original files on your iPod. And all song titles are preserved.
In this case, all songs/videos (both new and old) are on your iTunes library that you can syn with whenever you wish to without deleting any files.
It even has step-by-step guide on the whole process:
http://gutensoft.com/Guide/How-to-transfer-songs-and-videos-from-ipod-to-computer.htm
Best luck!
y go through all that when you can click on a t?
or you can put them all onto a flash drive/usb storage stick thing, then plug it in your new comp, and WALAH
no sshit? How’d you find it sherlock?
Having the power cord connected…?
The first thing you want to do is find media (a disk) that will support what you are trying to copy. If you are copying many files or very large files, it may take a considerable amount of time and effort to copy the files on a floppy disk or CD-ROM. Even with a small number of files, you may be better off e-mailing them to yourself and downloading them from the new computer. You would simply write an e-mail to yourself and click the 'Attach' button. When you open your e-mail on your new computer, you can download them individually to wherever you like.
Because many newer computers don't come with floppy disk drives any longer and your old computer may not have a CD-writer, you may like to invest in what's called a "Flash Drive," a small piece of computer hardware about the size of your thumb. You can usually find a 2-Gigabyte model for less than $10 (see http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage.jsp?skuId=8202045&st=flash+drive&type=product&id=1165609745683 for an example) that can hold more than 2,000 times as much as a floppy disks or about 3 CDs worth of information. But the best part is that there is no special software or setup.
With any kind of media, what you will need to do is open "My Computer" by double-clicking the icon on your old computer's desktop. Find the drive that matches the disk you want to copy to, and double-click it. You may be prompted to format the disk first if it is brand-new, which you should follow the prompts to do. Usually you can just click the "Format" button when given the option. Once the disk is ready, you can copy your files to it by right-clicking on the file you want to copy and selecting 'Copy.' Then return to the window for the disk and click Edit from the top menu, then select 'Paste.' You can copy entire folders full of files at once, so do this where you can to save time.
Best of luck to you!
yea i think so
Wow…uhmmm no!
Come on , that’s lame…the further you go the more stranger you get
A gigantic ipod?
I think typing ir really good and after a year of spinning this wheel , you’ll forget how to type
Assuming the computer are not networked, I'd use either a large usb flash drive or an external usb hard disk.
You could burn files to cd..but that would take a while.
Wireless N
Blade storage servers with several terabytes(If you have a small business, not necessary)
1000MPBS Lan Speed (would require semi- high end computers, though)
All the same OS (Vista, XP, etc. Vista and XP together don't communicate very well when it comes to networking)
If all the songs you want are on your iPod you can use the import to library command in iTunes, click on your ipod and it will import the contents.
Programs themselves must utilize the 'installer' to function properly.
Installers have all the necessary files that go into an operating system's folders, cabinets, and sub folders, etc., to make it run correctly.
Installers are downloaded form the internet, or come on the install CD.
You'll have to have this installer for all programs going to the new unit, but what you can transfer are the 'data' files; those things that the old unit created (documents, spreadsheets, pictures, etc.)
USB thumb drives, upload & store on a web space, networked systems, and external hard drives are some of the methods to get this data transferred.
hahaha this is a joke right??
What was your first clue?
FAKE!!!!
ARE YOU STUPID!? It’s a joke!!
I Love ØNN … They make their news soooo real. Was pissing myself that some of you really believed this *LOL*
Read the back of the box. Read the specs. If it says something like Windows XP SP2 or later, then as long as the computer's XP or Vista, it will work.
If the first one's Windows, and the second one's Mac, then no. It won't work.
Oh my godd this is so fucking funny
on another not OF COURSE ITS FAKE DUMBASSES ITS THE FUCKING ONION!
Jump drive.
You can try this software to backup the stuffs in your iPod/iPhone/iTouch. Recover lost or missing music, backup and restore all of your iPod/iPhone/iTouch content, including your favorite songs, videos, photo files and Play Lists, and that's not all. You can try this software to backup songs, videos, photos in iPod to PC, copy iPod songs, videos, photos to new ipod, computer or notebook.
http://www.dvd-video-converters.com/ipodconverter/ipod–itouch-iphone-transfer.html
Also, you can search some other ones:
http://www.ask.com
I’m so glad this is fake, what a counter-intuitive idea.
look video MrTitan1976
Funniest video on YouTube lol!
I would look at the eBay completed listings prices for a similar computer to decide if it was worth repairing.
Any 1.6 GHz dual core type processor is faster that your single core P4 3.2 GHz.
A new computer running Vista will roughly require twice the processor performance than a computer running XP to run about the same. Also you will need 2GB RAM with Vista Home Premium (recommended).
Speed does not mean much any more. AMD and Intel dual type processors and their different models have vastly different performance even when run at the same GHz. To be able to compare performance see "CPU gaming performance charts"
CPU gaming performance charts
(lower number is faster)
http://www23.tomshardware.com/cpu_2007.html
CPU Benchmarks
http://www.cpubenchmark.net/index.php
Graphics card gaming performance charts:
http://www23.tomshardware.com/graphics.html
http://www.pcper.com/article.php?aid=399&type=expert&pid=1
http://www.fudzilla.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=1595&Itemid=40&limit=1&limitstart=2
Mobile Graphics Cards – Benchmark List
http://www.notebookcheck.net/Mobile-Graphics-Cards-Benchmark-List.844.0.html
DirectX 9 vs 10
http://gizmodo.com/gadgets/pcs/directx-9-vs-directx-10-worth-upgrading-to-vista-for-243099.php
Hello! I'm a student at AAU and here's about as much as I know:
New Media is part of the Computer Arts school, so you're going to learn more about web design and web graphics. You'll probably learn programs like Photoshop, Flash, After Effects Fireworks, Dreamweaver, etc. and probably some basic HTML, CSS, etc.
Graphic Design is more traditional arts based, where you'll learn the principals of design and stuff like typology, calligraphy, print and package design.
You can always change your major if you end up liking one more than the other. You can probably even float between the two and still be a graphic designer, but learn the tools of the new media trade.
Itunes has a build-in backup tool in the file menu, go to File than select backup to disk.
If you want more info about moving your files, go to following page for a step by step tutorial :
http://ipod.about.com/gi/dynamic/offsite.htm?zi=1/XJ&sdn=ipod&cdn=gadgets&tm=228&f=00&su=p284.9.336.ip_p504.1.336.ip_&tt=2&bt=0&bts=0&zu=http%3A//docs.info.apple.com/article.html%3Fartnum%3D304814
Good luck
Chill everyone! I’ve been a Mac user for 15 years and I think it’s funny!
One button , nah…i prefer atleast 2
– Endless , Useless , possibilities…
I’m sure the future will stink…
I couldn't disagree more with the first post above about reusing parts. That only applies in a few situations where the computer is less than 5 years old. 10 is on the excessive side. The power supply is probably 200 watts or less. Compare that to a 500W PSU. Also, it probably doesn't have the right power connectors that most boards need today. And PCI? What is Matt thinking? What 10-year-old PCI card could you possibly want to reuse? Certainly not graphics or the dial-up modem! Most of everything is now integrated on many motherboard models.
You will not want to keep any parts aside from "maybe" the floppy drive which isn't used much anymore and has in a lot of ways been replaced with USB flash drives. Parts that used to be salvage-able like the keyboard, mouse, and CD-ROM are not even worth it these days. They are dirt cheap everywhere, come in USB and "optical" flavors, and most of all won't be the ugly beige color we had in the 90s!
Your old CPU, RAM, and motherboard has been passed up by at least 5 generations. You would be lucky to get more than $5 for any of them (and they're the main components). It would be best to donate it in working condition along with the monitor to a charity organization writing it off for $50.