I got THREE Acer laptops for my children from BestBuy for $399 each for Christmas and I am VERY happy with them so far.
Best 19 bucks I ever spent
Get a Macbook or Macbook Pro. I would imagine that you could link the two via a USC cable, or perhaps blutooth, to transfer the data.
If some of your bazillion songs on your ipod were not purchased using itunes (for instance, ripping a cd, or perhaps downloading from a torrent site), using a transfer program won’t work. The new itunes library on the new laptop will not recognize those songs and you’ll have to transfer them in other ways. Trust me - we had to do this over Christmas with my daughter’s ipod.
Google using your ipod as a hard drive to transfer music. Print the instructions and go from there. It was easy.
One big reason is the places I play poker do not work on a Mac.
Simple if you have DVD burner in the PC.
Select Library, then backup to disk. Feed it DVDs (or CDs but it will take more of them).
On the new computer insert the first disk and it will import by itself.
how many is a bazillion? would there be enough space on a few burned dvds? they hold quite a bit of data if you have a dvd burner.
Once you have the new computer, install the iTunes software on it - just download from the iTunes website again.
Then, use a USB cable from the old computer to the new one to add the iTunes files as follows: click on top-left corner of iTunes on the new computer - I think it says “file” - and find “add folder to iTunes.” When you click on itm, find the file which on a Windows computer would be marked “My Documents/My Music/iTunes (again, the file on the old computer). Click on that, and the program should copy all the tunes onto your new hard drive. (Or, you could just downloady the My Music/iTunes file to a storage drive and plug it in to the new computer - same thing.)
Just connecting your old iPod to your new computer will NOT accomplish this - it might just erase everything from the iPod. In fact, once you have all the songs on the new computer, then you will have to “re-format” your iPod, since the new computer will not recognize it. The computer will re-add the songs back on the iPod.
There may be a way to choose “manage music manually” option/preference (on one of the drop-down menus at top left), and just load everything directly from the iPod, but I never did it that way.
Email me if you want me to try to talk you through. Or you might get better advice from others. But I have done this kind of thing myself, successfully. Good luck.
I just moved a bunch of music, pictures and graphics from my old computer to a new one and just burned them to CD and installed directly from the CD. It seemed much easier for me than cables, because I am being so selective in what I move.
iTuns is so cool.
VooDoo Envy you can get any thing you want mostly under $5,000.
I remember seeing your question in the Itunes ‘Help’ files.
Once you go MAC, you’ll never go back.
Either:
a. Use a data transfer cable and accompanying software (I think Belkin has one for about $30 for XP to Vista) to move data from the old computer to the new computer
http://www.amazon.com/Belkin-Transfer-Cable-Windows-Vista/dp/B000JJPZW0
or
b. Use Anapod Copygear (part of Anapod Explorer, $20) to move the songs from the Ipod to the new computer
http://www.redchairsoftware.com/anapod/
I have done both and had no problems with either program.
Not sure what a bazzilion songs means, but if you create a playlist that includes ALL your music you can then burn it to DVD’s. Make sure you burn them as MP3s and not audio files playable in any CD player. Then after you get your new laptop you simply import it into ITUNES off the DVDs. Be absolutely sure you DE-AUTHORIZE your old computer’s Itunes or you may not be able to play the songs that you downloaded from Itunes. Also, by burning all your songs to DVDs you will have a backup in case of future crashes.
Go to your iTunes library (rt-click on any song in iTunes and choose, “Show in Windows Explorer”) and copy the mp3 files to a flash or external drive, cd or dvd. Each one is only 1 or 2 MB. Then import to the new computer.
As for iTunes, I can't help as I don't run it, but I would be surprised if there is not a way for it to import or scan your music directory. I mean, what are people supposed to do who move to iTunes after ripping all their CD's in another program? Start over? I don't see Apple as being quite that stupid.
Hire a 12-year-old to do it for you. ;-)