i Tunes uses i Tunes library files and your i Tunes Media folder to organize and store your media. Your i Tunes library files track the media you add to i Tunes, how you've organized it, and other information such as playlists. If you are at an office or shared network, you can ask the network administrator to run a scan across the network looking for misconfigured or infected devices. If you've got a series of recordings or ripped tracks from a CD-based audiobook that you want to splice together into an audiobook (similar to the M4B format), i Tunes provides the means to do it. There's several suggestions for a paid app but there must be a free alternative even if it's not as polished. I can convert the mp3 files into another format (aac) first so software to just merge and bookmark would be adequate. Fortunately, I found one: Seems to work quite well. If you’re running i Tunes off another operating system, such as a Windows computer, you’ll need to manually set the i Tunes library to consolidate. The fine specifics of how to consolidate your i Tunes library may vary slightly depending on which operating system and version of i Tunes you’re running, but variances from the directions given below should be slight.
|