I downloaded a couple of tracks from iTunes last week but I can only find one of them now. The other is not in the recently added/purchased list and can't be found on any of the playlists even though I'm pretty sure I'd added it. I don't think I clicked on anything that might have deleted it. It's not in the recycle bin.
What do you think I've done to it? Any ideas?
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"If you're going to do something tonight, that you know you'll be sorry for in the morning, plan a lie in." Lorraine
can't you download it again? dunno ive not used itunes . DRM is evil
Try a search in Windows Explorer using the track name - if it's still there, you're pretty likely to find it that way. If not, no idea what's happened there, but you should always be able to redownload especially on the same computer - at least you can with Napster.
If memory serves the actual files are often stored with names like ZKYT.(insert some random iTunes format here) to help with security. At least that’s been true of all the iTunes files I’ve copied from other peoples computer who were using legal downloads. The track names and other data iTunes uses are encoded in the files and iTunes and your iPod display that data instead of the file name. Running a Windows search may not help if this is happening because the name will just be a random assortment of letters.
Perhaps if the download were interrupted the files may be incomplete in a temp folder somewhere? I’m afraid I don’t have any really helpful suggestions that haven’t already been given though
A few weeks ago I had a similar problem. I had downloaded a tune and had been happily playing it on the iPod and the computer and then I went to play it from the main library and iTunes told me that it could not find the tune on the computer. I could still play it from one of the playlists but not from the main library (it was also still in the "purchased" playlist).
I eventually sorted it out by going to the purchased playlist selecting the son and right clicking to get a menu up and selecting the "info" section. At the bottom of the general info box was a disk address of where the file was stored.
I used windows explorer to go to that location to verify that the file was still there. I then went back to the main library on iTunes and from the file menue selected "add file". I then navigated to the file location and selected it and the file was then once again available from the main library.
iTunes just holds pointers to the files that it wants to use and it appears that sometimes one or more of those pointers can get corrupted. By reloading the file into iTunes you restore that pointer again.
The tricky bit is finding where the file is located on your computer.
Hope this helps.
That's only on the iPod, and I think it's more about file system limitations that security. On the computer it's usually named after the track number and name of the song, with a ".m4p" file extension if it's an iTunes Store purchase.
Like others have said, if you've downloaded the file, it should be on the disk somewhere, and doing a search will hopefully find it.
Let your mind go and your body will follow. – Steve Martin, LA Story
I wonder if they're displaying that way on my computer because I used my iPod to transfer the files from my friends machine to my one then? I may have simply copied the contents of the folders in my iPod into my existing library folder and then added it in iTunes.
Oh well, it hardly matter when that library is half the world away
Thanks everyone, but still haven't found it.
It's not on the recently purchased list even though another track bought the same day is.
iTunes Search did not come up with it, or the Windows search.
The download was definitely complete 'cos I'd already played it lots of times.
I asked iTunes to purchase it again and they very smugly told me that I'd already purchased it, which was honest of them, I guess. Annoys me to have to spend 75p twice over, but I may as well, assuming it'll let me!
What Criteria did you use to search for it using Windows Search (which isn't the best search facility ever)?
If it was me, I'd first find the working one which you know is still there, have a quick look in whichever folder it's in to make sure the "lost" one isn't there, and then search for every file on the entire computer with the same file extension.
I hesitate to ask, but I don't suppose you have a recent backup...?
Love dance, will travel
75p, 79p, whatever! You surely don't expect me to get things right, do you?
What working one? There's no evidence of it anywhere. Not convince I'm using the search facility properly, though. I typed in the name of the track, initially.
ErrmmI hesitate to ask, but I don't suppose you have a recent backup...?
I'd do a search, as DavidY suggests, for all files with the extension ".m4p" and see what it turns up...
Let your mind go and your body will follow. – Steve Martin, LA Story
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