![]() Lei può annullare il rinnovo automatico modificando le impostazioni dell’account iTunes Store sul Suo computer. Il Suo account sarà addebitato non più di 24 ore prima della scadenza del periodo di abbonamento corrente. L’abbonamento non è rimborsabile (salvo richiesto dalla legge applicabile), e si rinnoverà automaticamente per periodi di un anno finché Lei non lo cancellerà. Per abbonarsi Lei deve aver registrato una carta di credito valida nell’archivio di iTunes. Lei può abbonarsi a iTunes Match pagando un canone annuale. Launched in November 2011 in the United States (here’s our original hands-on), the service was later brought to more countries on December 15 and January 17, including South America, the UK, and other European countries. The Mastered for iTunes badge is displayed only when there is a bit of metadata in purchased files that tells iTunes to display it.Įarlier today, Apple updated its Terms and Conditions for the Italian iTunes Store to include information about iTunes Match, the company’s music service powered by iCloud. So for files that are matched, then downloaded, if there is only a Mastered for iTunes version on the iTunes store, the files you download will be in Mastered for iTunes format yet you won’t know that. But the files don’t display the Mastered for iTunes badge. I compared them with my original rips (using the methods described below), and saw that these files were not the same I was clearly getting the Mastered for iTunes files from iTunes Match. I added them to my iTunes Match account, matched them, deleted my originals, then downloaded the matched files. I have a handful of CDs for which only Mastered for iTunes files are available from the iTunes Store (these are new releases where labels only provide files for this format). ![]() If you rip a CD, match it, then download one of the files from the cloud, you don’t ever see the Mastered for iTunes badge. ![]() Kirk McElhearn, experimenting with CD rips, tries to figure out what exactly iTunes Match doles out once music has been matched in the cloud. Apple missed that deadline, but Cue subsequently told MacRumors that Apple was working on it and that he expected it would be released “before the end of the year” - and indeed it now has. Eddy Cue, Apple’s Senior Vice President of Internet Software and Services, first mentioned on Twitter in late June that Apple was working to “get to 100k for iOS 9”. It has taken some time, and longer than expected, but those of you with iTunes Match or Apple Music and large music libraries can now upload up to 100,000 tracks to the services, up from the previous limit of 25,000. Update 12:08 PM, December 6: Eddy Cue has confirmed to MacRumors that Apple has indeed “started rolling out support for 100k libraries.” Over the past couple of days, MacRumors has received several reports from users who have been able to upload music libraries of greater than 25,000 tracks to iTunes Match or Apple Music’s similar scan-and-match feature, and Macworld’s iTunes expert Kirk McElhearn has also noted a number of reports on his personal blog. MacRumors reported over the weekend that Apple Music and iTunes Match libraries can now manage libraries with up to 100,000 tracks:
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