Finally, Apple Adds Two-Factor Authentication to Apple ID

phone security

Just a quick note on something Apple was actually behind on…

Google has had two-factor authorization for a little while now, so Apple finally got up to speed with it. Here’s the “how-to”:


I just did this for both of my Apple accounts (iTunes & iCloud), as a little more security is never a bad thing.

The key to take away is… you get  a recovery number. So… DO NOT LOSE THIS NUMBER… or else :)


In my opinion, the entire world should move towards two-factor authentication.


This ends today’s public service announcement.

My Music Library Refresh with iTunes Match – Part Four

Apple iTunesFinally… weeks later – and with the re-ripping of a couple of The Mavericks CDs I still needed… I’m done.

Some Stats:
- when I started, I had 5,000+ songs less than 256bit
- now that I’m finished, I have 250+ songs less than 256bit

- when I started, I had 3,000+ songs less than 256 AND were ‘matched’ in iTunes Match service
- now that I’m finished, I have 7 songs less than 256 and still matched by iTunes Match service

- I downloaded approximately 3,000 songs from iTunes Match service to replace lower grade/quality songs

Now on to what I learned over the course of the process…

The Bad
- Some of the finite details do not work. List play count from an iOS device no longer syncs up with your library, this bothers me greatly.
- I would never pay monthly for this service. At 25 bucks a year, or even 50 bucks a year, I can handle it. It it was a 100% flawless service. Okay, so perhaps monthly (at a good rate), I might consider it.
- For whatever reason, some of the songs that are in the iTunes catalog will not “match” the songs in your library – therefore you can’t download it at a higher bitrate… but upload it. Dumb.

The Neutral
- Get your library in pristine condition prior to signing up. It will make everything so much easier.
- The songs from iTunes, though DRM free, still have your account associated with it in the metadata.
- The finite details with iTunes Match can be annoying as you’re trying to get things up and ‘perfect’, thus why I brought up the first point in this section

The Good
- If you love music, the service as a whole is indispensable.
- Having a library above 192 bit, I never thought it would be that much better. It is, in a big way, IMO. I hear things in songs I haven’t heard before.
- It completely revamped my music. Or another way of putting it – it made my investment in music worth more.
- The songs from iTunes, downloaded, are of MUCH better/higher quality than the ones that had previously.
- (I can only state this since I used Verizon) Even with 1 bar of 3G, or no 3G, iTunes Match still works! It’s… amazing.

Conclusion

frames fitzcarraldo albumDoing all of this really helped me get almost 9,000 songs in order. I found that I had a lot of duplicate titles from various songs that were on an albums – so those could be deleted. The same goes for some of the songs that I simply don’t listen to anymore (or never have). Old “bootlegs” of songs that I was desperate for at that time (of rather horrible quality in comparison to the rest of the library) are gone. With pretty much everything at >256, it easily exposes lesser quality music. I’m over 8,800 songs now, so getting rid of 200 songs was worthwhile, IMO.

Now my library is a tight, fit, streamlined, library of music. No “crap”, horrible bootlegs, songs never listened to / never gonna listen to, etc. Everything in there has a purpose. Songs, albums, metadata have been updated, broken track listings fixed. It’s fit! It can easily bench press 400 pounds! :)

To handle almost 4,000 new files of bigger size, I also had to clean my hard drive. Having to clean it turned out to be a plus. At the start, I was really low on space (5GB) – but now I have a good 44GB left after all is done.

Even my wife loves this service, as it has completely changed the way she listens to music. It took her 32GB iPhone and gave her a music library of 88GB, and now she can’t live without it. In addition to her phone, her 16GB iPad can now be used as a radio. This is new for her, as her iPad has now been taken to a new level of cool.

Fun tidbit… I had a modest collection of The Frames’ music but I didn’t know some of the B-sides that I had at really low quality were matched. I downloaded them with iTunes Match, and BANG! Then, I found out they re-released their first three albums remastered.  I then bought the second album (as it had a rare song on it – as in it was part of the ‘re-release’).  I only ever had a sucky 128 bit version of it (unmatched)… and wow… that song was awesome and it completely changed the entire album for the better.

As you can probably tell by now, I can just go on and on with this.

So to wrap it up, if I was asked “Is iTunes Match worth the trouble?” –  I’d say a very resounding… “YES… very much so. Especially at 25 bucks”.

This concludes the fourth installment of My Music Library Refresh Series reports, but stay tuned over the coming weeks/months for more thoughts on this continuing experience. If you missed the first three parts of the series, have a look at them here: iTunes Match Part OneiTunes Match Part Two, & iTunes Match Part Three.

My Music Library Refresh with iTunes Match – Part Three

Well, the process is still a-kickin’.

beatles music coverThe more I do this, the more I see that some digital music is simply not the same as other digital music. Taking it a step further, some digital albums are not the same. This is because of various reasons. For example: the actual recording process, the track order, or the quality of the music from start to finish. Therefore, I am actually rating my music now too as I go. If I see a song or album that was not rated, I am taking the time to rate them accordingly to my opinion of my music. Since they’re on my hard drive, (as I have deleted other files I do not need), it is safe to assume that even a “one star” album/song is something that will still be to my liking. I also have about five albums that are personal favorites that simply can’t be messed with. And lastly, I have albums or a music collection that is beyond a rating – the Beatles.

Therefore, my rating process will look like this:

1-3 stars @ 256.
4-5 stars @ 320.
Top 5 or 10 albums (to me) @ Apple Lossless.

This method should position me permanently for the future, as compression rates have not changed since the 90s – and they still top out at 320. Anything more than 320 (Apple Lossless or 100% uncompressed) will never change because it’s just math at that point. It just can’t get any higher than uncompressed.

mavericks-it-time-musicAs far as the re-ripping goes, I’m now up to the ‘M’s’ of my library as I just finished my Mavericks collection.

By the way… not to sound like an Apple fanboy, but iTunes Match is great. I just can not express this enough. So far, I’ve had no issues with the service – even in areas where my mobile reception is poor. To me, the service still working as well as it does with limited mobile reception is huge. It may be simply a testimony of Verizon’s awesomeness, I dunno. I have always received awesome throughput with Verizon at one bar. So at this point, iTunes Match is a huge deal to me.

Taking the time to bump up the quality and updating metadata as I go extends the power of my 83.65GB music library and it makes iTunes Genius that much smarter. To an audiophile like me, it’s indispensable. In other words, I now depend on this service.

Yes, it didn’t take long for me to do so. That more than anything should speak volumes of iTunes Match. If you have great music, then this is a service worth 25 bucks a year.

This concludes today’s report, but there’s more to come. Stay tuned over the coming days for more of my Music Library Refresh Experience. If you missed the first two parts of the series, have a look at both iTunes Match Part One and iTunes Match Part Two.

My Music Library Refresh with iTunes Match – Part Two

After a lot of time in front of my Mac, I have just finished the first pass of the iTunes Match downloads. My “work” went from 4,000+ songs down to 1,500+.

That’s a lot of downloads throughout the course of the day.  The rest will be re-ripping CDs (1,500+ songs). Also… I’ve SMASHED my hard drive space. The good news is that I’m pruning things – removing a lot of duplicate songs and albums/songs not worthy of my hard drive or cloud space. So I’m managing as I go. BUT… it’s coming along. Once this is over with, I’ll be set for a long time.

My First Hurdle

drm music cdI’m a little shocked, actually. It would appear that ‘back in the day’ there was DRM protection burned into music CDs. The ‘Mac’ (or OS X) didn’t care back then and did its thing to rip the audio from the CD.

Now, a decade later (as the music CD is now 10 years old), OS X actually “respects” DRMed music CDs! I actually had to use Windows Media Player to rip the music (in WAV format of course).  I’ll take that WAV file and convert it to Apple’s 320 Bitrate.

The funny thing is, I used my Mac to rip this music back in the day at 192. It had no problems then. Now, OS X just ejects the disk – it doesn’t even mount. This is rather unbelievable and disturbing. Disturbing that Apple, not Microsoft, is respecting DRM for once…? Wow.

An Update On Where I’m At Now

All of the music I have that is not on CD has been re-downloaded by iTunes for “free”. All of the music that is not >256 and on CD is a pain in the arse. This is mainly because re-ripping is a slow process. Since I have a lot of CDs that are <256… it’s going to take a while.

I also continue to prune my hard drive. I have freed up space by getting rid of music I simply do not listen to anymore. I’ve deleted probably 100+ songs. I have also made the decision that any album that I deem to be “good” but not “great” will either be re-ripped at 256 or simply downloaded via iTunes Match were applicable. This will speed things up.

So far, I can conclude the following:

icloud music library1. If you’re going to do this, get your library as much in order as possible before starting. Therefore, prune your collection for unwanted material and get your files in order.
2. Downloading from iTunes is fast and easy… and kinda fun.
3. Any song that is not found in the iTunes catalog is uploaded to iCloud, so make sure all of the metadata is as accurate as possible.
4. iTunes Match is not very customizable. Therefore, once you hit ‘go’… you’re off to the races.

Current Thoughts

I’m quite proud of my music library and I’ve felt this way since 2004. It’s been this way because of the iPod, and eventually it paid off BIG TIME when ‘Genius Playlists’ came to light. But my library is huge, and since 2004 it has become slightly unwound. I am tightening it back up with higher quality music files and optimized metadata. I have found that pruning what you don’t listen to or care about anymore is very important. The overall process is like making your music library get into shape. It’s going to be slow at first, but the payoff will be huge.

iTunes Match is best served with a tight library. Since it’s designed to work with a tight music buying ecosystem (iTunes Store), iTunes Match is flawless. Since I have a vast music collection and more than the iTunes Store catalog, it’s this part in particular that must be tight before clicking ‘go’.

Personally, I kinda like doing this stuff. It really is flexing your hard drive space which happens to be a big source of entertainment – and the payoff is just too great. All you have to do is it once, then the rest is cake. Well… maybe again a decade later.

After everything so far, do I recommend that iTunes music lovers go through this process?
Absolutely. Yes. Do it.

Take control of your music and hard work.

This concludes today’s report, but there’s more to come. Stay tuned over the coming days for more of my Music Library Refresh Experience.


My Music Library Refresh with iTunes Match – Part One

I recently signed up for iTunes Match so I could update all the music in my library that is less than 256 bitrate. Being the perfectionist that I am when it comes to music, this is the only way to go. This idea exposed me to the fact that a lot of music needed to be re-ripped, as I used to rip my CDs at 192 back in the day. So, for all of the music that I own on CD, I had to re-rip back into iTunes at 320. For all of the music that has been downloaded previously lower than 256, I had to use iTunes Match to download. This process will be both fun and educational, so I figured I’d keep track of what I find and share it here on Vegau’s Tech Blog.

And so, the documentation of my experience begins…

itunes-match

This is going to be almost as much work as it was back in my first music library refresh back in 2004. Now, eight years later, and approximately 60GBs more music/files, it’s going to be time-consuming. So far I’m in the letter ‘C’ in my library.

Before I go any further, I’ll give a brief set of thoughts behind the iTunes Match service. iTunes Match, when it works (I’ve had no failure BTW), works awesomely and is perfect for a music-lovin’ guy like me. With it enabled on my iPhone, I now have iTunes Genius playlists, (not to be confused with regular Genius playlists). To me… this is the ultimate awesome.

I approach my music just like I do my movies – I only own it if it’s worth my money and hard drive space. Period. With iTunes Genius playlists, I literally have a radio station of music genres, with ALL with MY music (not just 16 or 20Gbs worth locally). I have no idea what is coming on, but chances are, I’ll like it because I own it. To me, this is the ultimate in music bliss and well-worth the price of 25 bucks a year. This is what I am most stoked about, hands down.

verizon lte towerAgain, Verizon delivers. Although their network is not as fast as AT&T’s, it’s definitely more reliable. It’s this reliability that allows for a flawless iTunes Match experience whilst traveling. See… this isn’t just my “local” music… it’s my entire 80GB music library. Since I don’t listen to 80GBs of music at a time, I didn’t think I’d care about having such a large library.

I probably listen to 35GB of my music, but having all 80GB on a Genius Playlist is pure perfection. I just increased my library of Genius pulling stock 55% overnight. I’m not talking about iTunes selecting “radio hits” from my library – I’m talking deep cuts off of albums. This… this is awesome. The combination of radio singles and deep cuts by similar artists- not in my local iPhone library – is the ultimate. To sum up, I have never had a love affair like I do today with my music. I compare it to my iPod Touch back in 2008.

When it came to setting up iTunes Match, it took three solid days of it just running in the background. By day two I thought something was wrong. I stopped it, rebooted my Mac several times, etc.  In the end, nothing worked but time. I read online in a plethora of places about many people having the same issues – so all it took was time… and that’s completely fine by me.

Now that all the music is scanned and “matched”, I can delete any song and redownload it from iTunes at DRM free, 256Bit. I set up a Smart Playlist (luckily, more on that later), with it showing my library with less than 256 bit music, that is “matched”. I’ve been deleting those songs, and then redownloading them with absolutely no issues whatsoever.

The only issue I’ve had so far is that Smart Playlists don’t work all the time. THIS pisses me off. I never thought turning on a function would break another here in Apple’s “MacLand”.  It did though – and apparently it’s a known issue in the community. Smart Playlists still work – it’s just that “new” Smart Playlists sometimes don’t work. I wish I had known this beforehand, but I’ll keep learning as I go.

That’s my initial report. Stay tuned over the coming days for more of my Music Library Refresh Experience.


iPad Mini Retina Display Could Add 30% To Total Parts Cost

ipad miniAccording to a recent report, adding a Retina Display to the iPad mini could add 30% to Apple’s total parts cost. Like the original iPad, however, I think the Mini is two years away from Retina. Also, (like I said about the iPad with Retina), I don’t really care unless the weight is the same or lighter than the current model AND the thickness remains the same or thinner. It is all about size, not the display… that is, even if they did bring it to market this year.

Now that I have switched to a Mini, do I miss a sexy Retina display on an iPad? Yes, but not nearly as much as you would think. The iPad Mini’s display is just fine in comparison, for now – although I do think Apple can bring in a better display (one akin to the Nexus 7). I also believe the big mods this year will be a faster processor, hard drive space (@128GB), and (hopefully) more RAM. These are all specs I would gladly upgrade to, but I won’t.

In my opinion, the Mini IS the iPad to get – even right now, without the Retina. Give me a Retina, but refuse to compromise on size and weight, as the size and weight is the Mini’s biggest advantage.

New Mobile OS’s Will Be A Future Trend

google android flawEarlier this month, a story surfaced about Google asking journalists to tone down the story of a massive Google Play security flaw.

Personally, I am not surprised since this has been going on since 2008. This is yet another reason why I loathe anything Android (and a good chunk of Google, in general).
This is very serious stuff, and I feel like it falls on deaf ears when I bring it up. My mind just cannot comprehend the populous’ decision to purposely lose their privacy and be a money-making whore for a faceless company.

It is of my opinion that in the coming years, Google will start experiencing the same backlash much like Apple is now.  Android has reached its saturation point (similar to Apple’s iOS) and other ecosystems beyond Android and iOS will be coming. Samsung (the biggest Android provider) is starting the switch with its Tizen OS. I was a tad shocked to see Samsung moving off of Android and starting their own, but it makes sense when it comes down to business. In the years to come, I foresee more hardware companies that will opt to go in this same direction.