Saturday, November 29th, 2008 at 7:07 pm by pylorns
I was having a hard time finding a good application that allowed me to migrate my bought music to my other computers in my house or in my car or on my non-apple music players. I found a great program called Requiem that helped me out by removing the DRM on those specific songs. You see I’m the firm believer that I don’t want to “rent” a song or application from a company I want to own it and take it to any computer without having to worry if I have to authorize one of my other computers to be able to play it. Not only that I really dislike iTunes as a player. I’d rather use another software application.
Anyway one of the drawbacks is that if you’ve already updated to iTunes 8.02 or greater you’re screwed.. well just about. You basically need to stay at 8.01 iTunes and Requiem 1.8.2 will decrypt these files for your personal use on your other devices.
You may be asking “where can I get requiem?”. Try the pirate bay. Yes, that’s right.. bit torrents. Seach for “requiem itunes” and you’ll come across it. I suggest scanning the zip file for viruses as well - I didn’t find anything but I also don’t trust stuff from bit torrents.
Disclaimer: Wetwired does not suggest sharing any copywritten music. The staff at wetwird do not, nor should you. As an added bonus if you were to crack the DRM your personal information is still stored in these files so if you were to share them with someone else that information will flow back to Apple and guess who will be out? Don’t say we didn’t warn you.
Tags: apple, DRM, itunes, requiem
Posted in music | No Comments »
Friday, November 21st, 2008 at 4:42 am by Finley
The 2.2 release has been put out for iPhone users to download, and there are some new features on some apps. A quick ‘n dirty review below:
- Google Streets view in maps feature: This is incredibly cool. I’m not a major user of the street views online, but having it on the phone is really nifty- and kinda creepy. I looked up my grandmother’s address, and it pulled up just fine complete with a 360 degree view of her neighborhood. Just seemed… yeesh.
- Google Search relocated in Safari browser: Others are calling this an excellent adjustment to save screen real estate in the browser. I say… meh. I mean, it’s nice and all. Just not a huge change like others are saying.
- Podcast Over-the-air Download capability in iTunes: Okay, this one’s really nifty. They’ve finally added podcast downloads over wifi on the iPhone, and I love it. Now, if I want to get the latest episode of a favorite podcast and I’m not at home to get it, I can do so from my phone. Very convenient, very cool. I’ll be using this one.
Overall, some nice additions to the software- and yes, this means I killed the jailbrake I’d done to the phone a while back to get these updates. I can live without the jailbrake, to be honest. It killed battery life, had serious bugginess and I dropped calls with it. All of these problems were less severe once I went back to Apple’s firmware.
Out.
Tags: 2.2, apple, iphone, itunes, update
Posted in iphone | No Comments »
Sunday, July 20th, 2008 at 10:52 am by pylorns
In my previous tutorial I covered how to create ringtones using a Mac. Today I’ll cover creating ringtones using a PC and only free applications such as audacity. Download and install audacity and iTunes on your PC prior to doing this. I’m also using Vista but the same or similar screens exist for XP.
1. Open the piece of music or sound that you want to be your ring tone in Audacity and edit it down to under 40 seconds.

2. Go to File>Export and export the song as MP3. Audacity does not have the ability to export to AAC.

3. Give the file a unique name and save as .MP3

4. Once you have saved it you’ll next need to open the file in iTunes. Right click on the file and choose Open With>iTunes

5. Now that it is in iTunes you can convert it to iTunes native mp4 or AAC. Right click the file and choose Convert Selection to AAC

6. Now we need to rename this file to a ringtone format so browse to your iTunes music folder - in most cases its your default windows music folder.

7. By default windows Vista does not show file extensions. You’ll need to turn this off. Go to Tools>Folder Options. Un-check Hide extensions for known file types.

8. Once you have done this you should be able to change the file name to .m4r

9. Choose Yes that you are aware your computer will explode if you change the file extension.

10. Right click on the file and choose to open with> and choose iTunes.

11. Once you open it up in iTunes you should see it is now in its ringtone category. And you’re good.

Update: some of you have commented that you can’t move the song over to the iPod after it is created. You get a message like “unable to find file” others have had no problems.
First off when you get a message like that it is telling you something important. Try finding the location of where the file is supposed to be. Reimport it. Also you might verify that you renamed the file correctly by opening a command prompt and look at it in dos.
Tags: 3g, iphone, itunes, pc, ringtone, tutorial
Posted in iphone, music, tutorials | 37 Comments »
Saturday, July 19th, 2008 at 2:35 pm by pylorns
This is an article about how to create custom ringtones for the iPhone or iPhone 3g for capturing movie quotes or music from a DVD using a Mac. I’ll follow up later with one specifically for PC. This article assumes that you know a few things about how to setup itunes, audio hijack, and the built in DVD software. I also use Sound Studio Pro but Audacity will work too. *disclaimer I am not suggesting creating copyrighted ring tones - that would be wrong…
1. Launch Audio Hijack Pro and select your DVD player then click the Hijack button. Play your movie, click on record during the part of the movie that you wish to sample.

Audio Hijack
2. Open the sampled audio that you have recorded in Sound Studio Pro, or Audacity and edit it to get the amount of spoken word or music to under 40 seconds.

Sound Studio Pro
3. In sound Studio you’ll next go to File>Save As> give the file a unique name
Choose File Format of AAC (m4a)
Choose a Bit Rate, I usually go with 112 or 96kpbs.
Click Save

Saving in Sound Studio Pro
4. Now that you have saved the file you need to change it to an iTunes recognizable format for ringtones. To do this, simply right click the file and choose Get Info.

Get info of file
5. Where it says Name & Extension you want to change the extension from .m4a to .m4r

Change File Extension
6. You’ll receive a warning that says “Are you sure…” Click the Use .m4r because yes, you are sure.

Use .m4r
7. The last step, right click again on your file and choose to open with iTunes. This should put the file (if you have itunes auto-copying) in your ring tones section.

Open with iTunes
8. As you can see in my ringtones is my new sample. When I sync up my iPhone it will automatically be transferred as long as I have ringtones selected to transfer.

Voila
If you have questions post a comment.
Tags: 3g, apple, audio, hijack, iphone, itunes, ring, ringtone, tone
Posted in iphone, tutorials | 7 Comments »
Wednesday, May 28th, 2008 at 11:08 pm by pylorns
Wetwired Radio Presents: Our 7th, yes 7th podcast. This time we have finnally been able to get a 3-way going. The devils three-way of podcasting. Join Pylorns, Finley, and Red Said. For an enlightening podcast covering the Apple Leopard 10.5.3 update, Finley’s vacation update, Red’s 4year blogaversary, Reds Blog Hijacker, and why the wetwired forums are gone.
Listen to this via itunes or directly below.

Standard Podcast [22:28m]:
Play Now |
Play in Popup |
Download
Tags: itunes, podcast, redsaid
Posted in podcast | 3 Comments »