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ive got a new computer and want to transfer all my music into itunes,will i have to start from scratch or is there a way to copy it from my ipod?.

2006-12-02 05:49:16 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Consumer Electronics Music & Music Players

4 answers

Yes i think there is a way. I have a mini ipod by the way.
First you plug in the ipod to your new computer.
Go to "My Computer"
and there you should see your ipods name and it will say "Removable Disk". Click on it. It opens and shows you folders but most of the time the music folder is invisible so now you must go to Tools>Options>View> and click on "Show hidden files and folders"
When you go back the folder will be there, for me it is called "iPod Control", your music will be there but in different folders and some may have wierd letters as titles but dont worry that is your music and voila! just move all of that music into your new computer!

2006-12-02 06:03:56 · answer #1 · answered by Sapphire 2 · 1 0

Yes you actually can copy from the Ipod to a computer - I had to when my old hard drive failed.

Here's the basic instructions per the source link.

iTunes won’t let you configure the iPod to prevent the auto-syncing until AFTER the iPod is connected to iTunes. It is imperative you do not partner the two libraries when asked by iTunes, tell it no so the auto-sync doesn’t wipe your iPod clean leaving you a blubbering idiot in the process. Once the iPod is connected and set to operate as a hard disk on your PC exit iTunes. Go to the iTunes directory on the Windows machine (My Music/ iTunes by default) and delete the XML file and the ITL file which is the library database installed when you hooked up the iPod.

With those files deleted the iTunes library is now empty as it should be for this process. Navigate over to the iPod in My Computer and make sure you set the folder options to show hidden files. Find the hidden folder called iPod Control and even though it’s filled with many files with nonsensical names this is in fact the music library on the iPod. Copy that folder to anywhere on the PC which will take a while if you have a lot of songs. When this copy is complete open iTunes and in the Files menu tell iTunes to Add a Folder and select the iPod Control folder you just copied over. You could actually do this straight from the iPod without copying them all over but I was nervous something might happen to the library on the iPod so I copied them first.

Before you do the Add a Folder mentioned above make sure iTunes is set to manage your library and to copy files when adding to iTunes. This is important to get iTunes to organize the songs using the ID3 tags in the song files you just copied over. That’s it– you have all your iPod songs now properly copied to the desktop and nicely organized and in the iTunes database. Note that when you first connect the iPod to the computer after you set iTunes to auto-sync it will wipe the iPod clean and sync the new iTunes library back to the iPod. It seems like a silly step but since the two libraries are the same anyway it doesn’t hurt anything, it just takes time. It is necessary to make sure the databases are identical. Once it’s done you can delete the iPod Control folder you copied on the desktop since iTunes has copied the songs into it’s own directory tree.

2006-12-02 14:01:25 · answer #2 · answered by psionyxau 2 · 2 0

you can buy a program called Tune Tools for iPod, I got mine at Target, but you can probably find it anywhere. Just get that(it's only like $10) and go into the program while you have the iPod plugged in. There's an option to backup the files on the iPod, click that and run a full backup. The files will be back on your computer and stay on your iPod. It worked perfectly for my new computer.

2006-12-02 13:54:49 · answer #3 · answered by crazy8s622 2 · 0 0

Nope

2006-12-02 13:51:52 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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