Posted: September 8th, 2010 | Author: Jeff Soo | No Comments »
Great discovery today on Lifehacker and 9to5Mac! You can plug in any device running iOS and play music stored on the hardware in iTunes 10. In previous releases of iTunes, you would need to sync your device with that computer in order to play music, so if I were at the office and tried to play music on my iPhone that was synced at home, I would have to wipe my library. After connecting the device to the computer, cancel the sync, and expand the contents of your device in the left navigation panel. Press play and voila!
In iTunes 10, and perhaps some up-to-date iTunes 9 versions, you can now plug in an iOS device, tell iTunes to Cancel the sync request (and check off “Don’t ask again”), and from there on out simply play music or movies off whatever device you have plugged in through that iconic white cable.
I haven’t tried playing video content because I don’t have any stored on my iPhone, but I would assume it would work as well. This is definitely a feature that should have been available a long time ago, but nonetheless, glad it’s finally implemented!
Posted: September 2nd, 2010 | Author: Jeff Soo | 1 Comment »

I was pretty excited to update to iTunes 10 after seeing some new UI updates and features. Aside from some interface changes (I’ll save that for another post), I wanted to get started on Ping, Apple’s “social network for music.” And then I started catching up my Twitter feed to see a few running posts by @Scobleizer pointing out one significant flaw with Ping: Artist discovery. I couldn’t believe the names he was tweeting: Black Eyed Peas, Daft Punk, Madonna… So I gave it a try as well, searching around 15 headline-caliber artists, and what do you know? “Your search had no results.”
Was it too early to release Ping? Should Apple have waited a while to get more artists onboard? Definitely. After registration, Ping recommended only 12 artists to me, and I only chose 2 or 3 to follow. On top of that, I’ve been reading Facebook Connect has been axed (for now) due to “onerous terms.” On the contrary, there are features that are pretty useful – concert tickets, especially. I’ve read reports that Apple was working on a partnership with LiveNation, but after clicking on the tickets link for a Jack Johnson concert, I was redirected to Ticketmaster.com. If in-app ticket purchasing is in the horizon, I could see it being a useful tool. We’ll see what happens in a few months, but for now, Facebook Pages, with a larger database of artists and essentially offering the same content, is shining.

Update: Just read on Engadget
Facebook’s friend-finding API is generally open access, but anyone that wants to hit it an extreme number of times has to sign a deal agreeing to protect Facebook user data and limit network impact. Given the sheer size of the iTunes customer base, it’s no surprise that Facebook wanted such a deal, but apparently negotiations broke down — possibly over what Steve Jobs referred to as “onerous terms” — and Apple decided to just go ahead and use the API anyway.