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Apple Training Series: iLife '05 is not intended as a comprehensive reference manual, nor does it replace the documentation that comes with the applications. It's designed to be used in conjunction with other comprehensive guides that explain features, functions, and lots of interesting details. These resources include:

  • Apple's Web site: www.apple.com.

  • The Macintosh iLife , by Jim Heid (Peachpit Press), an accessible and popular reference to all the iLife products.

  • The Little Digital Video Book, by Michael Rubin (Peachpit Press), a concise resource on how to make your videos have more impact and look professional. While the book is not about the iLife software specifically , it expands on many of the concepts touched on in the lessons on shooting and editing video.


Lesson 1. Making a Custom CD from Your Music Collection

Lesson Files

A couple of CDs from your personal CD collection

Tools

iTunes, Internet connection (optional)

Time

Approximately 45 minutes

Goals

Play CDs in iTunes

Import all or a portion of a CD into the iTunes Library

Add or adjust CD information about albums or songs

Browse and search efficiently through your music library

Create and customize personal playlists of your favorite music

Make custom CDs


Imagine having instant access to songs you have always loved but haven't played in eons (because they were buried on albums you generally didn't like). Imagine setting up what amounts to your own private radio stationplaying all your favorite tunes for hours on end (days, even). iTunes makes this possible. CDs, those silvery discs that have become the center of your musical world, are about to become archaic. It's time to start thinking of a CD as an archive, a safe backup. To really enjoy your media, you want it readily accessible and malleable as only a digital creation can be.

Although this lesson demonstrates a fundamental aspect of iTunesthat is, getting your CDs into your computer, organizing them, and burning a custom CD of your favorite songsit has a broader goal. Somewhere near where you're sitting right now are probably dozens, perhaps hundreds of CDs that you've been purchasing for the last many years . The idea of this lesson is to initiate the ambitious project of moving that entire collection from discrete CDs into a single, massive jukeboxan enormous body of acoustic joy!

As discussed in the "Getting Ready" chapter, you're going to follow three characters through their adventures with iLife. In this lesson, let's begin by seeing what Christopher, the father of the birthday girl, is up to. He's working with his daughter to make a special birthday party CD as a gift to her guests. You'll start by working with just a few CDs to get into the groove.


Starting iTunes

As with many Apple programs, you have multiple ways to launch iTunes. You might double-click the application file on your hard drive, located in the Applications folder. You could simply insert a music CD into your drive, which will automatically start iTunes. For the purposes of this lesson, single-click the iTunes icon that resides in the Dock.

First-Time Use

Christopher uses iTunes all the time. But if this is the first time you've launched iTunes, the program's iTunes Setup Assistant will direct you through a series of windows .

1.

Click the iTunes icon in the Dock.

2.

Click Agree in the software license agreement window (but only if you mean it).

3.

Click Next in each window to use iTunes' default settings. These settings, by the way, are pretty smartly selected. The only one you might want to skip is the one asking if you want to go to the Apple Music Store. You don't need to go there now, and can easily go later to download songs when you're ready.

4.

Click Done. This concludes the set up and will take you right into iTunesa clean, empty space where you can begin your lesson.