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iTunes Smart Playlists (they are smarter than me)
| iTunes Smart Playlists (they are smarter than me) |
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I Don’t Have Anything To Listen To……REALLY? My First Smart Playlist I read Merlin Mann’s How-to on Smart Playlists and thought I’d give it a try. I decided to make a simple one first. I created a playlist called “Unlistened!” by telling iTunes to only play songs that have a Play Count of Zero. My jaw dropped when I opened the playlist. It was more than 2,000 songs in size. That means, out of the over 5,000 songs on my iPod and computer, I’ve only given just over half of them even a single listen in the last year! Does this mean I need to get rid of some music? Of course not. Besides, I bought and paid for it dammit. I’m sure there were plenty of times that the perfect song was available for my mood, but I just didn’t realize it. Decide What You Like This is one of the more important steps in to using Smart Playlists. Start rating your music as you listen to it. For me, its been an ongoing process. As I’m listening to an album, if the song hasn’t been rated, I rate it. I absolutely love the Beatles (that’s not a bold statement is it?), but I HATE their song Birthday. There I said it. Sue me. It gets a mere one star. Rating these has its reward of course. You can then set up smart playlists to only play random 5-Star songs etc… but I’m sure you’ve figured it out by now. A good way to do this is to create a playlist of songs that have no ratings, and sort the listing by play-count. Forgotten Love This is one of my favorite smart playlists. Suggested by Merlin Mann at 43 Folders. Songs that I haven’t listened to in 60 days that have more than a 4-Star rating. The point of this article isn’t to teach you how to make Smart Playlists. 43 Folders already has a great article on that. But I didn’t understand their power to help you create a playlist that is full of things that you want to listen to. Now on my 16gb iPod, I have yet to think “I don’t have anything to listen to”.
This article was reposted with the permission of the author. It originated from the technology blog woahmatt.com |
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