iTunes 9.1 Brings E-Book Support, iPad Sync, New Abilities and Improvements To Genius Mixes and Auto Bit-Rate Conversion
Apple has released iTunes 9.1 after all the rumors that mysteriously popped up for it (and most of them came true). iTunes 9.1 brings a number of fixes and features such as e-book support, which would make sense because of the iPad, new abilities to Genius Mixes and auto bit-rate conversion along with other fixes for the software
The sources from yesterday stated that Apple is going to be replacing the Audiobooks category on iTunes with a broader Books section of the store. That prophecy wasn’t fulfilled however as the iTunes store still has the “Audiobooks” label as one of the section of the store. Another speculation that came to fruition was the ability of iPad owners syncing all of their material from the iBookstore on iTunes, which would only seem proper for the update.
Continuing into mentioning the other improvements and features iTunes brought, iTunes 9.1 brought improvements to Genius Mixes, allowing users to delete and change the name of the Genius Mix as well as providing controls right on the album covers of the mix that is playing. Genius Mixes works by the Genius cloud collecting information about the content on your iTunes library, then analyzing that information with the over 30 million iTunes libraries that have been collected and determines which songs will play great together in your library based off information from the others.
Automatic bit-rate conversion has been added to the summary pane when you connect you iPod, iPhone or iPad. The function transform all audio content being synced to 128kbps AAC format so all songs sound the same at all volumes whether from the iTunes Store or media that you previously owned.
Other than that, the rest of the update addresses some tweaks and fixes, such as to the summary pane where it will see the Check for Update and Restore buttons move to the left side of the page instead of the right and have been boxed to give a neater and cleaner look.







The second last paragraph doesn’t make sense. Bit rate has nothing to do with volume. The on-the-fly bit rate conversion simply allows you to automatically convert your (higher bit rate) music to 128kbps AAC during the syncing process to an iPhone or iPod. The biggest advantage for this is to save storage space.
Well, I just used the feature and now all my songs sound level with each other, even without using sound check. I had some 96Kbps files on my iPhone and now they sound clear as the ones I bought from iTunes.
I am not sure about file compression, but it certainly did make all my songs clear.
I mean to say that it does compress files, but it also made my music sound clear as well.
Sorry for leaving that part out of the article.
Well, there you have it. So this feature does in fact compress files to conserve space?
Does it?
Yes, iTunes automatically does this for you when you check the box to give it the OK to do so. Afterwards, it compresses audio files to 128Kbps AAC just like the content you get from iTunes itself. By doing so, more space will be available for more content on your iPhone, iPod, or iPad. Sorry, I left that out of the article. My apologies.
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This kind of software are called dvd to iphone.
You may need this.
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