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Adding artwork to a radio stream in iTunes
The more straightforward method is to simply add a dummy local file (a one second mp3 will suffice) with with the same tags as the stream so they are both part of the same "album", with the dummy file as "track 1" of the album, and the stream as "track 2" of the album.
Adding artwork to a radio stream in iTunes
This method in comments seems a lot more stable; still, the posted hint is a nice point of curiosity as to behaviors allowed & disallowed by Apple for no apparent lack of capability.
Adding artwork to a radio stream in iTunes
"SJ must not listen to streams, or at least not look at his host machine while doing so, or this would have been handled in iTunes 4."
Adding artwork to a radio stream in iTunes
"[The] new Home Sharing feature of iTunes only works with Apple Store files."
Adding artwork to a radio stream in iTunes
My guess is that you are confusing "Home Sharing", which only works with Apple Store files, and "Shared Libraries", which works with all files no matter where you got them.
Adding artwork to a radio stream in iTunes
Actually, I'm not confusing them at all.
Adding artwork to a radio stream in iTunes
"You may wish to re-explore Home Sharing; if you use the identical itunes login/password, all items (AKAIK), be they AAC, MP3, Protected AAC, etc., will all be accessible from any machine."
Adding artwork to a radio stream in iTunes
Yes, it is true. The initial internet furor over the issue was because each machine had to be authorized to the same iTunes account, and had the same limitation of authorized machines as iTunes purchases (5 machines). But make no mistake, as long as the machines are on the same iTunes account, it will sync everything you like between machines, with some very nice options (by artist, by album, etc.).
Adding artwork to a radio stream in iTunes
"All this moaning about Apple not doing this or that with iTunes or OS X in general is BS. They come up with cool new stuff all the time in both of them. The pace of development is much faster than in the old classic OS days, and much, much faster than Windows." |
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