YIBADA

Apple News: Apple Music Deletes iTunes Libraries, iPhone 6S Will Have Worst iPhone 6 Feature, iOS 8.4 Kills A Major Feature

| Jul 13, 2015 10:56 PM EDT

Apple CEO Tim Cook

Apple launched iOS 8.4 on June 30 of this year. iOS 8.4, which was first seeded to developers in April, has the new Apple Music service. However, Apple music can unintentionally delete your iTunes libraries. Apple's upcoming flagship smartphone, iPhone 6S, is expected to come with great features. However, according to recent reports, the smartphone will have worst iPhone 6 feature.

Apple Music Deletes iTunes Libraries

The numerous problems around Apple Music continue to increase after the public release last month. One of the major problems that is causing a great pain is down to Apple's handling of offline listening. To do this, a subscriber of Apple Music needs to have iCloud Music activated. This moves music libraries of users into the cloud, so the tech giant can add DRM (Digital Rights Management) versions of Apple Music tracks to their library and they can download these to their devices.

Unluckily, iCloud Music's synchronization with iTunes on the desktop is not perfect, resulting in album art, playlists, tags and metadata to become corrupted. At present, it is not easy to recommend Apple Music to individuals with a remarkable collection of digital music.

iPhone 6S Will Have Worst iPhone 6 Feature

The rumored iPhone 6S will have 16GB storage capacity, 9to5Mac reported. Over the past few years, iPhone owners have realized that 16GB is not enough.

Apple's Senior Vice President Phil Schiller said that 16GB is appropriate for many users due to cloud-based services like Apple Music and iCloud, in addition to iOS 9's app-thinning features.

iOS 8.4 Kills A Major Feature

iOS 8.4 is now available and includes the Apple Music streaming service application. However, it axes Home Sharing for Music.

According to Apple Insider, iOS 8.4 removes support for Home Sharing in iTunes. This means that users cannot automatically share their PC's iTunes library with other iOS devices and computers on their home network. If users subscribe to iTunes Match and Apple Music, chances are this isn't an issue since you can access thousands of songs from Apple Music anywhere. However, if you don't, there is no actual way to share your library across devices at this point.

Related News

Most Popular

EDITOR'S PICK