COMPUTERS
November 5, 2008 3:47 PM PST

Married with iPods, Part 2: One library to rule them all

Posted by Donald Bell

Photo of multiple iPods on desk.

Is every iPod in your home associated with a different user profile on your family computer? Merging iTunes libraries between users may make life easier for everyone.

(Credit: Donald Bell/CNET Networks)

Last week, I showed you a technique for keeping your music collections separate from one another in a communal iTunes library. This week, I'll try and help out those of you with the opposite problem--people with fractured iTunes libraries across multiple user profiles who want to pool their family's media together.

The root of the problem is that unlike Windows Media Player, Winamp, or nearly any other multimedia jukebox application, there's no way to get iTunes to actively monitor multiple folders on your computer and add new content automatically. In a perfect world, you could tell iTunes to create its library based on the music stored in all the "My Music" folders of every user on your computer. Unfortunately, iTunes doesn't work that way.

You can, however, make it so that any media added to any instance of iTunes on your PC is copied to a single, central location that all users can access. Pointing every installation of iTunes on your computer to a common library is as easy as holding down the shift button when you launch the application. The hardest part, often, is archiving and merging all the separate media collections each user has been amassing up until this point.

Photo of account profiles in Windows XP

Click to see our step-by-step tutorial on merging iTunes libraries across multiple user accounts.

We've made another step-by-step guide that walks you through the back-up, redirecting, and restoring of a single iTunes library that pulls content from every user account on your computer. For extra inspiration, you can also take a look at the Insider Secrets video I shot, that outlines the steps for this iTunes tip and last week's. With any luck, you can use both these tips together to pool all your family's media and iTunes purchases together, and still maintain some sanity-saving restrictions on what content is copied to your individual iPod or iPhone.

If you have any other tips to share, please include them in the comments section.

Donald Bell is CNET Reviews' senior editor for MP3 players and portable audio, and one half of the MP3 Insider blog and weekly podcast. He also likes getting his hands dirty with digital audio tools for musicians and DJs.
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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 5 comments
by moogle2 November 6, 2008 10:52 AM PST
So, what's the deal if one family member has their own account and log in and I have my own- and we bought DRMed music/videos. If we create a playlist that has music from both accounts is it still going to stop midway through the playlist and ask for the password?
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by ashwinkn November 29, 2008 10:38 AM PST
As long as the computer is authorized for both accounts, there should be no issues. The only time an issue should occur, is if you try to sync your DRMed music to the other person's iPod, or vice versa.
by salmanj1 November 8, 2008 3:38 AM PST
You could waste a dvd and to your way or... You could just open the master library and ask it to "add a folder to the library" which will be your OTHER library.

Note: add music to iTunes must be checked BEFORE IMPORTING if you plan to delete the other library folder..
Reply to this comment
by davinp November 12, 2008 11:57 AM PST
What about the Creative Zen? The inventor of the iPod interface, which Apple stole? You can connect the ZEN to any computer to pull up your music library. No seperate profile needed. It works in Windows Media Player, whereas the iPod does not.
Reply to this comment
by Teknerd November 29, 2008 2:56 PM PST
I downloaded Libra by Steve Roy. It's shareware that has an unlimited trial period, but I did pay the suggested $10. It's fantastic and it's incredibly easy to use and set up several iPods.

Download here: http://homepage.mac.com/sroy/libra/
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MP3 Insider is a blog and weekly podcast created by CNET's MP3 technology experts, Donald Bell and Jasmine France. Each week, Jasmine and Donald discuss the latest digital music (and video) news, hardware, software, and media services, and address reader calls and e-mail. Send us e-mail at mp3insider@cnet.com or call us at 1-800-720-CNET (2638) and be a part of the show.

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Donald Bell Donald Bell is an electronic musician, a veteran record store employee, and a fearless hardware hacker. He's also CNET's Senior Editor for MP3 and digital audio.
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