“Watching Steve take the stage and roll out a new version of iTunes got us all nostalgic for the old days, when iTunes logos changed color and our jukebox looked like it could withstand a bomb blast. Below is the history of the application that is running more than any other on our Macs. It spawned the iPod, iPhone, Apple TV and gave us an excuse to throw out those ugly CD towers that resided in the corners of our houses in the 90s. The ever present, iTunes.”
Eh, it looks more like Winamp than QuickTime.
iTunes was ok at first when it did what it was supposed to do; play music. Now that its code has bloated over the years from so many “features”, I won’t even install it. What is with all those services?!
Hey writer, I’ll keep my CD tower in the corner. CDs play anywhere.
How can you judge it if you don’t even install it? 😉
I had installed it in the past. But after noticing how it assumed I owned an iPod or needed Bonjour, I uninstalled it. iTunes just made my system go slower. Most applications give you a choice of options to install.
And by the way I did use a Mac for 5 years.
iTunes isn’t malware. It has it’s flaws, but it isn’t a bad program; at least on mac. It takes one second to start (in SL), and flips through my music with blazing speed. Even on my old iBook, it’s fairly fast once loaded (loading takes about 3 secs on it). It’s pretty cool to see it’s evolution over time.
Now one thing I miss about the old iTunes releases is the old yellow/black spinning CD burn icon. That was such a pretty button :p
Couldn’t agree more. I also don’t find it anything special.
On my early anti-Microsoft days, my main player was Winamp, but since Media Player 11 got out, it has become my main media application.
I liked SoundJam MP, but then I switched to Windows at the time and met MusicMatch Jukebox. It totally blew me away with it’s awesomeness. Most solid music management/player of the time and still would probably be my favorite music app if Yahoo! hadn’t destroyed it.
It’s features maybe in other players today but MMJB just did them better. Super tagging was near flawless, folder watch (for music on home server).
My conspiracy side believe someone had Yahoo buy the app then dismantle it and drive away all the users.
Sorry, iTunes is okay but it won’t sync over a network (home sharing is not the same), no smart tagging. It’s pretty much just a store.
I briefly used SoundJam, but my favourite player at the time was Audion. It felt more like a Mac application, with heavy use of drag ‘n’ drop.
iTunes today is a massive bloatware program.
ITunes: the emacs of mp3 players 🙂
iTunes is only “bloatware” if you don’t use all the features. If you do use the features, it pretty much “just works”. I’d take it any day over WMP, and the last good version of WinAmp was the version that Nullsoft release before being overtaken by AOL (2.9 or something like that?)