![]() ![]() “OK,” I say to myself, “I’ve got a number of albums with no art, let it sort itself out like people online say to.” Well, it never did. I learned snooping around online that AMPArtworkAgent is the Apple Music (Player?) Artwork process that matches album art. Looking in Activity Monitor, Music was using quite a bit of CPU even while not playing, but so was AMPArtworkAgent. No big deal, probably just sorting out some iCloud crap. I started playing music with Music, and noticed my CPU usage was a bit high. Their installers took care of everything. I didn’t bother to do anything specific with very ‘controlling’ apps like Adobe.I use a lot of command line utilities, including mutt for mail, installed.I also use iTunes Match (but not the Apple Music streaming service).My iTunes library was ‘ Tunespanned’ to an external hard drive.I finally got a new mac and was forced to upgrade.įirst things first, the upgrade went smooth using Migration Assistant, even though: I delayed upgrading my old mac to Catalina because of the iTunes -> Music transition, and was worried I’d have some problems. I’ve never really had any issues with iTunes, and while I’ve had to do a few workarounds over the years to get my music to where it needed to go, I’ve been perfectly happy with iTunes. Right now, I’m at about 1,300 albums and 17,000 songs. Not the massive collection that some people have, but reasonably well organized and tagged music going way back to the initial versions of iTunes 1. ![]() ![]() I have a lot of music that I’ve ripped myself. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |