iTunes 11 Is Finally Out: Here’s What’s New

iTunes 11 Is Finally Out: Here’s What’s New

Apple’s slightly overdue update to iTunes is out. Finally. It’s a sizeable re-imagining of a piece of software used by a massive amount of people. So you should probably take a minute or two to acquaint yourself with the new stuff. Here’s what’s changed.

Your Library Sidebar Is Gone

One of the biggest changes is how you get around in your Library. The old left-hand bar with Music, Movies and Podcasts is gone, replaced with a drop-down in the top left of the app. The change frees up loads of screen space for more information, but it also makes navigating to different forms of media slightly harder, so it’s a trade-off.

Your Music tab also has some new filters. The old iTunes had Albums, Artists, Genres and Composers, while the new one has Songs, Albums, Artists, Genres, Playlists and Radio. Playlists have been moved to the top bar, since they used to exist in the now-defunct sidebar. “Songs”, we presume, is the old list view, but we’ll update you within a few minutes to confirm.

Browsing Through Music Is Different Too

Apple’s new “Expanded View” looks like a cross between the classic information-based view when you’d click an album and Cover Flow. Basically, it shows you the songs in an album (or presumably from an artist you clicked), and keeps the Cover Flow-like view across the top, just not as massive and visually overpowering as it is now. The upshot is that it makes navigation easier, sort of, since you’re not dumped totally into a list view. But it’ll probably feel extraneous to a few of you who find the navigation options (just the albums or artists immediately before or after what you’ve selected) not worth the wasted space.

It’s Got an Embarrassing New “Preview History” Feature

You know how when you’re shopping for music, you’ll preview a song or two from an album, just to make sure this is, in fact, the catchy or angsty or depressing single you’re looking for? iTunes saves all of those clicks now, which you can get to by hitting the Preview History button. No more stealth drive-buying the new Britney album in the store for you.

There’s a New Mini Player


This will either be the most minor change, since most of you probably don’t use the MiniPlayer, or be the thing that finally gets people to actually use the MiniPlayer. Apple’s stripped off most of the controls, like skip forward or backward, play and pause, and volume control, since Macs have hardware buttons for that now that are more efficient than using the mouse or trackpad. It’s replaced them with buttons to check the next few songs, search the rest of your library, or just expand to the full window. It’s probably not quite as efficient as keeping iTunes in a separate Space, but if you like having iTunes on your desktop in some form, it’s a nice and thoughtful change.

The Store Looks the Same on All Your Devices Now

It’s not a huge overhaul — the basic organisation seems the same — but Apple’s unified the iTunes Store look and feel across your phone, tablet and computer. Everything’s done with the general design language of the broader iTunes 11 revamp, but we’ll let you know if anything significant turns out to have changed under the hood.

It Will Hold Your Place Across Devices

With iTunes 11, if you pause movies, TV shoes, podcasts, audiobooks or iTunes U files on one device — say, your phone — you can start them back up on another device and pick up where you left off. This is the same cloud bookmarking that Amazon’s used with Whispersync — and that Apple uses with iBooks and Safari — but it’s nice to see it come to other sort of media. We’re not sure if this works with Apple TV (we suspect not) but we’ll update to let you know.

Purchase Recommendations from Your Library

Apple’s gone out of its way to make these non-intrusive — you have to click an “In the Store” button to even see them — but there are recommendations for stuff you should by based on things that are in your library now.

iTunes Music Is Sneakily More Cloud-Based

This isn’t one of the more publicised features, but it’s one to keep an eye on. If you buy a song from iTunes on your iPhone, it will pop up in your computer’s library. But that doesn’t mean you’ve downloaded it; instead, iCloud just loads a placeholder, which you can use to stream the song instantly. You have to click a separate download button to get the file itself. This is could be the first step toward Apple making iTunes more of a hybrid locker/store.


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