Slashdot Mirror


Flawed iTunes Stands Out Among Apple's Products

waderoush writes "On top of all the other features that it has crammed into iTunes, Apple this week added Ping, a Facebook-like social network for music discovery. It's all part of the company's plan to dominate the world of consumer media, but Xconomy argues that this time, Apple may have gone a bridge too far. iTunes, nearing its tenth birthday, started out merely as a program for ripping CDs, and has grown increasingly creaky and impenetrable as Apple has added more and more cruft, the article argues. The company won't have a stable base for its new media empire until it rebuilds iTunes from scratch — perhaps along the lines suggested by its other new product this week, the revamped Apple TV."

6 of 390 comments (clear)

  1. Cruft by TyFoN · · Score: 5, Informative

    Not only is itunes full of cruft, it was originally bought from an outside developer and shoehorned into what apple wanted it to look like. It has been horrible from the get go.

  2. iTunes...feh by Pojut · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'm sorry, but iTunes is a piece of crap as far as software is concerned. I don't know how smoothly it runs on a Mac, but on Windows it's nigh useless (this is on a Phenom II X4 965 with 4 gigs of RAM, btw).

    The day my wife switched over to an alternate piece of software (she uses SharePod) was the day she became much happier.

  3. Sadly true by dr2chase · · Score: 4, Informative

    I lit up Ping last night, it seemed to only know about music I had bought from Apple (1.4% of my library), and said "That user hasn't written any reviews" when I clicked on "My Reviews". Hel-lo? Might you suggest to me, "here's how to write a review?" "would you like to write a review?"

    Or maybe, an option to harvest ratings already made (1-5 stars) from my iTunes library, instead of asking me to go wandering through the store?

    The route to "review an album" goes down an interesting rabbit hole that accidentally exposes their database organization into the UI. Take an album that is not in Apple's catalog (e.g., Anderson/Burroughs/Giorno, You're the Guy I Want to Share my Money With), you get to the "write a review page" by clicking on the arrow next to a song. This then takes you to a different album containing that song, not the one you might want to review.

    I realize that Apple, like everyone else, is just trying to make a buck, but you're not supposed to give the game away quite so crudely. If you don't have the album, say "sorry, we don't have the album in our store. Do you think we should, and would you like to review it anyway?"

  4. Re:How Does the Same Company Make iPods and iTunes by Evardsson · · Score: 5, Informative

    Just as a heads-up - Ping is OFF by default. If you want to use it as another spam portal you have to turn it on.

    At least they didn't follow the Facebook protocol: add a new insecurity, uh, "feature" and turn it on to the whole world by default.

    --
    Death looks every man in the face. All any man can do is look back and smile. - Marcus Aurelius
  5. Re:How Does the Same Company Make iPods and iTunes by cyberfunk2 · · Score: 4, Informative

    There's no auto-opt-in for ping.. you have to turn it on manually.

  6. Re:How Does the Same Company Make iPods and iTunes by immaterial · · Score: 4, Informative

    Perhaps they buy them because they're not as wildly misinformed as you are? Macs are not iPhones.

    Macs have flash, you aren't forced to use iTunes on a Mac any more than you are on a PC (that said, the Mac version is far less shitty, though it still desperately needs a rewrite as TFA says), and "Quicktime" isn't some add-on cruft like on Windows, but rather is part of the video frameworks of the OS (but as far as playing videos goes, you can use VLC, Mplayer, Plex, whatever the hell you want).