iPad&iPhone user

Ask the iTunes Guy

Kirk McElhearn answers your iTunes questions

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Sometimes too much informatio­n makes things confusing; iTunes’ display of iCloud Status for movies and TV shows is one example. We explain what this means. We also discuss how to delete songs from a playlist, how to combine playlists in iTunes, plus what happens when iTunes Match is turned off.

Cloudy iCloud Status

Q: A friend showed me his iTunes library recently. In his Movies library, he has a column called iCloud Status, which says something about each of his movies. In my iTunes library, if I display that column, everything is blank. Why is this?

A: This is an interestin­g question, but the answer is rather prosaic. The iCloud Status column is meant to show the status of music tracks in iTunes Match or iCloud Music Library. Apple has a support document explaining what these various statutes mean. We hadn’t noticed that this column can display for movies (and for TV shows); it isn’t available for apps and audiobooks, for example. But for videos, this column only displays one of two possible statuses: Purchased or Ineligible.

Obviously, Purchased means you’ve bought the video from the iTunes Store, and Ineligible is for

videos you’ve ripped and added to your iTunes library. But there’s no iTunes Movie Library, at least not yet, so the existence of these statuses is a bit odd. Unless Apple is planning to let us match movies to the iTunes Store at some time soon...

Given the way the movie and TV industries work, we’d not hold my breath about that being possible, though We’d love to see it. Imagine if you could insert a DVD in the optical drive and have the iTunes Store match a movie? That would be great. Matchless music

Q: I’ve had an iTunes Match subscripti­on for a number of years but I’m going to let it expire when it runs out this month. When I turned off auto-renew, I saw a message saying that my matched and uploaded tracks would no longer be available on iCloud. I understand that, but will all the matched songs, downloaded from the cloud, stay on my computer? And if I sign up for iTunes Match in the future, what then happens?

A: All the songs on your computer stay on your computer. Which means if there are any that are in the cloud and not on your computer, you need to download them before you unsubscrib­e, or you’ll lose them. If you re-subscribe at a later date, then iTunes re-matches all your music; it won’t retain your library in the cloud.

Delete a song from a Apple Music playlist

Q: How do you remove a song from an Apple Music playlist? I’m using the most recent version of iOS 10.

A: Yes, Apple has changed things again. Before, you could just swipe a track to the left to delete it from a playlist (but not from your device). Now, there’s a new way to do this. View a standard playlist. Tap the Edit button at the top right of the screen. Tap the red ‘-’ button, then tap Delete. How to combine playlists

Q: I want to combine all my different playlists into one so I can then separate the list into two different playlists for different types of music. How can I do this? A: Combining playlists is simple. To start with a simple example, lets say you have three playlists, A, B, and C. If you want to combine them, create a new playlist; let’s call it Z. Next, drag each of the playlists (A, B, and C) onto the Z playlist in the iTunes sidebar. This will add all the songs of each playlist to the Z playlist, but will also ensure that no songs are duplicated. If any of the songs you drag are already in the playlist (Say A has a few songs that are also in B), iTunes will alert you and ask you if you want those songs to be duplicated, or if you want to skip them.

 ??  ?? Deleting tracks from a playlist on iOS 10 takes a few more steps than before
Deleting tracks from a playlist on iOS 10 takes a few more steps than before

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