So what doesn’t it do? For starters, it does not let you play the songs on your iPod directly from its interface. It also lets you import all the playlists on your iPod into iTunes with the click of a button. iPod Accessįindley Designs’s $20 iPod Access has most of the features you’d expect-it quickly detects any iPod you connect, it allows you to browse and search songs, it supports videos, and can effortlessly import songs from your iPod into any folder on your Mac or straight into iTunes (even making sure that it does not let in any duplicates). Although Expod shows the playlists on your iPod, it can’t copy them, and the app doesn’t copy files directly into iTunes. When you click the Extract button-the only one in the toolbar-the next window lets you specify a destination for the files to be copied to and gives you the option to have them filed in folders based on the metadata information contained within them. You can then either manually select the songs you’d like to copy (aided by a search box) or press Command-A to select them all. Click your iPod and you’re presented with a list of all the tracks it contains. Fitting squarely in the bare-bones category, Steve Joynt’s free Expod immediately detects any connected iPod upon launch and lists it in the sidebar on the left.
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January 2023
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