Is there a way to retrieve one playlist that I deleted by mistake from a Time Machine backup and restore it to my Music App or iTunes library on my iMac? I can't seem to figure out how to find a specific playlist in Time Machine. I am not an Apple Music subscriber if that makes any difference. I have many playlists, and they are made up of music that I both bought from Apple and uploaded myself. When Apple made the iTunes changes, I just kept using the new Music App and adding purchased music to my library. I regularly back up my iMac to two external drives with Time Machine. Please tell me that Time Machine not only backs up tunes but playlists as well. I sure hope so.
This is over my head unless you help me further. Are we talking about restoring one playlist or my whole iTunes library of 18,000 songs and 40 playlists each with about 200 songs? I am assuming from your answer that my playlists are backed up but that I just haven't figured out how to access them, right?
Make sure Music is closed. Open Finder. Open your user's Music folder. Open the Music folder inside that. Now enter Time Machine by clicking the icon in the status area at the top of the screen. See Restore items backed up with Time Machine on Mac - Apple Support. Pick a suitable date, select the Music Library(.musiclibrary) file and click Restore. There is no point in overwriting all the unchanged media files. Deleting a playlist from the library doesn't delete any songs from it so those should have remained in place. The playlists are inside the file that you restore. Once this is done launch Music, the library should now be in the state it was in when it was backed up complete with the playlist that you removed in error.
OK, so your active media folder is /Users/jazzman/Music/iTunes (original)/iTunes Music/ which although unconventional shouldn't affect the process of restoring the database from Time Machine. Follow the steps as I gave them here.
Playlists are stored in the library database. See Use multiple libraries in Music on Mac - Apple Support. You're going to be using the choose library process to ensure that Music opens the file you restore from Time Machine rather than some cache of the library it may make in another location.
A playlist is an ordered list of references to tracks in your library. Because they don't normally exist anywhere as individual files you need to temporarily restore an older version of your library database to recover the missing list.
Since the terminology here is quite foreign, let's try to make this easier for me. Is there a way I can restore my entire iTunes library to the date of my last backup from Time Machine? If that restores my entire music database along with the music playlists, it seems to me that would be an easier fix. The key for me is that it must completely restore BOTH the music database AND the playlists. If this can be done without a lot of trouble, please tell me how to do it. That would solve my problem.
I closed Music and opened Finder. Then I opened the Music folder on the left under Favorites and the Music folder inside that. That last Music folder contained a Music Library that was only 24.5 megabytes. Could that be right? I have 93 Gb of music in my library. I think I did this the other day, but I did not open the Music folder before trying to restore it from Time Machine. Maybe that's where I went wrong. We'll see. Please clarify before I do this. Thanks.
There is a Media folder, but it only contains ringtones. There's an iTunes folder, an iTunes(original) folder and a Previous iTunes Libraries folder. I'm apprehensive about this. I wish I could speak with someone by phone for an assist. I've been diligently backing up my iMac for years, and you would think there would be an easy way top do it. I'm just a user but not a technical support person.
You can check to see if the last modified date of this last thing changes when you open and close Music. If so then this is the file that needs to be replaced with an earlier version from Time Machine. If not then perhaps you've created another .musiclibrary database somewhere along the way. You would need to find that file, and restore an older version of that file instead.
I'm beginning to see daylight. I opened that Music library database through Finder. The last modification to it was Saturday at 6:03 pm which was the time I finalized that last playlist that I made. So it seems to me that is the file that needs to be replaced with an earlier version from Time Machine. am I on the right track?
Here's what happened. I tried it several times. It appears to have replaced the Music Library but not the Either I made an error, or Time Machine does not back up Playlists. First I closed Music. Then I opened Finder>iMac>Users>Jazzman>Music>Music. The Music Library was there. I left that open and minimized it. Then I opened Time Machine and went back to Friday the 21st around 4:30 pm and selected the Music Library that appeared there(it did not appear as .musiclibrary). I hit restore. The following message appeared: An item named "Music Library" with extension ".musiclibrary" already exists in this location. Do you want to replace it with the one you're restoring? I said "Yes". I also went back to a January 6th backup and tried that one. It didn't work either. Like I say, either I missed a step or two or Time Machine does not back up Playlists. What's your take on this?
Yesterday I got the 4.2.7 silent board delivered as well as the BLTouch and a glass bed. I was able to install the silent board without a problem and according to the many, many diagrams I've looked at, I also have my BLTouch installed correctly. I've installed several different firmware versions as well as manually compiling some.
I used the following diagram which was provided in a link by the seller. I also tried the firmware for Ender 3 pro 4.2.7 board on the Creality website as well as a few other firmware versions from various YouTube videos.
When I start up my printer the BLTouch does its normal startup thing and my printer says it's ready. But when I try to auto home, bed level, or even manually control the BLTouch it doesn't extend at all. I've spent about 4 hours trying to figure it out on my own and I'm throwing in the towel.
It just seems to be hit and miss. Most work but then one album here and there wont. Back in the day when I had a Star I could change the files via the network share but now I have to unplug the USB drive and try again and wait for the rescan.
Version R6 is rather old.
Most people have upgraded to R7.4 or R7.5 (depending upon operating system).
Useful to have latest version before experimenting.
Your upgrade is free as a registered user.
Oh I listen to many FLAC streams and personally cannot detect a difference between local WAV source or online FLAC source. It is mostly having gone this way already I now stick to it. When I was still using Roon it was a non issue. But this is one of the few remaining challenges I face since shutting my Roon Core down.
Your computer will be at risk getting infected with spyware, adware, viruses, worms, trojan horses, dialers, etcwhile you are searching and browsing these illegal sites which distribute a so called keygen, key generator, pirate key, serial number, warez full version or crack forTouchJams 3.5.2.7. These infections might corrupt your computer installation or breach your privacy.TouchJams 3.5.2.7 keygen or key generator might contain a trojan horse opening a backdoor on your computer.Hackers can use this backdoor to take control of your computer, copy data from your computer or to use your computer to distribute viruses and spam to other people.
The appeal of this desktop-tablet hybrid is that it addresses a problem that has nagged all-in-one makers for years. Often pitched as a kitchen PC, a secondary home entertainment center, or some kind of family organizational kiosk, the all-in-one has always fallen short of its ambition to elevate the humble desktop PC. A tablet or a laptop can do all of those things, often at a lower price, and more conveniently due to their smaller size. Those mobile devices also don't require a power cable.
By shedding the cord, at least in 3-to-4-hour doses, Sony's new PC can offer true short-range portability. It also brings with it a larger screen than you'll find on most current mobile devices. The Vaio Tap 20 won't be for everyone, but I won't be surprised if its in-home flexibility attracts an enthusiast niche.
Design
One key to straddling the line between desktop and tablet is finding the right display size. If the screen is too small, you might as well just make a laptop. Go too large and you hurt usability. The Tap 20 measures 19.75 inches wide, 12.13 inches high, and, at the thickest point of its tapered back panel, 1.5 inches deep. It weighs just under 11.25 pounds.
You can imagine the Tap 20 or a competing product perhaps weighing less, or having a thinner display, but overall Sony appears to have achieved a reasonable balance between desktop size and power and tablet convenience.
The display itself is covered in glass, but the body is all soft, rounded plastic, with grip-friendly indents along the left and right edges on the back panel. You most likely won't carry the Tap 20 around in a backpack or a briefcase, but the average adult should be able to move it from room to room or up and down stairs with little difficulty. And while 11 pounds is almost eight times the weight of an iPad, the Tap 20 isn't so heavy that it's uncomfortable to use in your lap for an extended period.
When you set the Tap 20 on your lap like a tablet, or lay it down flat on a coffee table, the touch screen becomes the most natural way to interact with it. For general navigation and inputting single commands, the touch screen feels as responsive as that of a typical smartphone. You might notice some physical drag on your finger in apps that require continuous contact, like air hockey or art programs. The drag isn't bad enough to spoil the entire experience, but it's annoying when you encounter it.
b37509886e