![]() ![]() If your goal is to give someone else on your local network (and already signed in to Home Sharing) both a playlist and the constituent tracks, you must transfer the tracks themselves first. The only (more or less) legal option I’m aware of is burning a CD with the playlist contents, assuming your Mac has a SuperDrive. But Apple no longer lets you buy someone else an arbitrary playlist of files-you can send an individual track or an entire album as a gift, but that’s not the same as buying a playlist. One solution is to share the music using Home Sharing (see Broadcast an iTunes Library in Your Home), which works well enough if the other person is on your local network and has one of the (up to) five computers you’ve authorized to play your purchased content. If not, an error message will appear when the playlist is imported stating that not all tracks are available. ![]() So, if the recipient happens to have all the same tracks in her iTunes library, she’ll hear everything as you intended. Unlike mix tapes (remember mix tapes?) or their CD equivalents (remember CDs?), playlists don’t include the actual music-they really are just lists. You can send that list to your friends so that they, too, can experience the sonic perfection of your curatorial skills. Perhaps you’ve created the world’s best playlist for a family road trip, for writing on a rainy day, or for birthday parties in odd-numbered years. ![]() Broadcast an iTunes Library in Your HomeĪ playlist in iTunes is exactly that-a list of songs.Broadcast and Share Games and Game Stats.Broadcast Browser Tabs to Other Devices.Share iPhone Calls and Texts across Devices.Share Your iOS Device’s Internet Connection.Sync Calendars and Reminders with Others.Sync Calendars and Reminders across Devices. ![]()
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