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 Rate music quickly

iTunes Tips
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If you work while listening to iTunes on your Mac, and want to rate your music quickly, here are some tips:

1. Create an "unrated" smart playlist in iTunes:

My rating is (nothing)
Size is greater than 0 MB


Turn on Live Updating

The second item keeps you from rating streams.

2. Either get the handy Synergy preference pane, or some kind of hotkey launcher.

3. If you use Synergy, set hotkeys for play/pause and for each star rating you'll want to use.

If you are using a hotkey launcher, you'll need to work with Applescript. Launch the Script Editor and paste in the following

tell application "iTunes"
if player state is playing then
set thisTrack to current track
set currentRating to thisTrack's rating
set thisTrack's rating to 80
end if
end tell

Note the "80" above: that sets the currently playing track to 4 stars. You'll want to create versions of this with 100/80/60/40/20.

Once you've done that, save the scripts somewhere and create hotkey actions that launch the script in question.

When you feel like rating some music, set your playlist to Unrated and go. At any point when a song is playing, punch the appropriate key combination to rate it. As soon as you rate it, play will stop, so start it again. You can grind through a lot of music this way.


by Adam Rice on Jan 19 | 8:00 am
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 New Releases

Smart Playlists
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For those of you who like the latest and greatest-

Create a smart playlist:


Year is 2004


This is also great for reliving your favorite years (ie- college, high school, etc.). Year ranges also work well for this.


by dfbills on Jan 18 | 8:00 am
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 Classic Rock

Smart Playlists
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Building on yesterday's entry- you can add genres for more specialized listening.

Create a smart playlist:


Genre - is - Rock
Year - is in the range of - 1960 to 1979 


by dfbills on Jan 16 | 8:00 am
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 Refreshing a Random Playlist Directly on the iPod

iPod Tips
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Following is the gist of an off-topic response I wrote to "Random 25". As I feel it's an important point, I've entered it as a new topic.

On the iPod, play the whole random playlist. When it's finished, if you go into the playlist again, you'll find a brand-new selection of songs.

Caveat: if you skipped an unwanted song, it will still be in the list because the iPod doesn't increment the play count until it's played all the way through. You can "trick" the iPod into thinking an unwanted song has been completely played and thus remove it from the list.

Solution: while playing an unwanted song, press the Select button once to invoke scrub mode and scrub to the end of the unwanted song. The iPod will consider this a fully played song and if you've set any time-based criteria, it won't reappear in the playlist.

That's another important point. If you fail to specify songs "not played for x amount of time", the same bunch of songs will show up because you're not filtering out the songs just played.


by japester on Jan 15 | 8:00 am
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 Flavors of Mozart

Smart Playlists
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Great list for boosting the brain power-

Create a smart playlist:


Composer - contains - Mozart
Genre - contains - Classical 


by dfbills on Jan 14 | 8:00 am
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