Tech Tips: 15 Ways to Make iTunes Rock

I often find myself envious of Apple fans, as they get access to all sorts of neat little tricks within iTunes—remote speakers, controlling playback via their handheld iPhones and what-have-you, other cool stuff like that. Well, worry not Windows user, for a fun little application called Airfoil allows you to set up a portable rock station anywhere in your apartment, house, or dwelling.
So long as Airfoil is running on two networked computers, it’s super-easy to pump the sounds of one to the other. Because nothing’s more fun than DJ’ing a party from the comfort of your home office--or, for that matter, Rickrolling your friends unexpectedly. The program slaps noise into your broadcast after 10 minutes unless you buy the paid-for version… so if you’re really concerned about that, then try the freeware alternative Speakershare.

Pardon the German, but it’s been a real pain to try and find a working timer application that lets you use the power of iTunes to gently drift yourself off to slumber. The app Sweet Dreams does just that, reducing the volume of your system over a period of time that you specify until, ideally, you’ve finally succumbed to sleep.
Better still, this app will even shut off your system when the timer reaches the big fat zero—perfect for those that would like a gentle night’s sleep without the glare of a monitor pervading their room. So what’s this app’s major downfall? German. Still, with such few options to choose from, I’m willing to venture that you don’t need a few years’ language skills in your repertoire just to know what to do to enable a simple timer. Right? Gut.

If you really, truly can’t stand the thought of having to comprehend German to make your system’s sounds expire at a given time, here’s an easier solution: ClickWhen. This app, written by Lifehackers’ own Adam Pash, is simple in its execution. Launch it, then select a spot on your display that you want to click in a given time period from this very moment—like, say, the “pause” button on your iTunes screen. Then input a time.
That’s it.
Once the timer runs out, your mouse will magically click itself on the point you previously selected. It’s as easy as that. Yes, this app seems silly, but it’s always a perfect way to, say, give yourself 30 minutes of rocking before you have to go leave the house to do something, or switch over to a brand new playlist once your party has hit the three-hour mark. And yes, you can even have the app perform double-clicks as well. Two functions for the price of none!

How do I love thee, doubleTwist? Let me count the ways: one. You let me synchronize my Android phone with my iTunes library, which is almost a cats-and-puppies-as-friends kind of situation that, at first glance, should seem impossible.
But I’m here to tell you that it isn’t. Grab the client application, grab the associated Android application, and you’re good to go. Soon, wireless synchronization of your songs will be within your grasp!
If you don’t want an entirely new song client, however, then your best bet is to stick with good ol’ iTunes and a little app called iTunes Sync. So long as you flip your Android phone over to disk drive mode, you’ll be able to pull it up directly within iTunes—but more importantly, you’ll be able to use iTunes to manage the playlists that synchronize to your Android phone as well.

Thus enters the application iTuner, a self-proclaimed “iTunes Companion” that, indeed, adds a ton of functionality within an easy-to-access button on your taskbar: “automated library maintenance, playlist exporting, playlist sychronization with MP3 players, global keyboard control, lyric discovery, and track and playback control. C#, WPF, MusicBrainz, iTunes APIs, and more,” reads the app’s official site.
I only listed that as I did because there’s just too much that iTuner does to say it in any way other than a simple data dump. From automatically nuking missing and duplicate tracks in your library, to deleting empty folders within your main “music” directory, to global hotkeys that you can use to control iTunes regardless of whatever program is in your foreground… the list of that-which-iTuner-can-do is long and extensive.
To be honest, it’s also an excellent replacement for the default iTunes Mini Player that now looks anemic by comparison.

If the thought of global hotkeys mentioned in the above description for iTuner got you salivating, great! I’m not sure why this would be the case, but suppose you don’t really need or want the various features that said iTuner app provides—you just want hotkeys and vanilla iTunes. That’s it. Alright. Check out HKTunes, an open-source application that does just that: It adds global hotkeys to your system such that you can control iTunes without actually having to have the app running in the foreground.
Playing World of Warcraft and want to stop your jams to concentrate on a specific boss fight? Easy. Want to jump tracks back and forth while writing up an article about iTunes? Totally possible. Need to change the iTunes volume on the fly? Get a multimedia keyboard… or memorize your HKTunes hotkey combination!

Alright, Firefox users. Here’s one of the times when you get to do a little gloating over your Chrome-using compatriots. That’s because there’ s really no way to go about controlling what’s going on in iTunes via some kind of toolbar within Chrome. Firefox users get the awesome add-on FoxyTunes to do just that: You can see what’s playing, jump tracks back and forth, seek out specific parts of a song, and do all the sorts of things you’d expect to find on the iTunes Mini Player… right within your browser.
Seriously. If you’re a Firefox aficionado, there’s no reason why you would ever want to use the default iTunes Mini Player over this full-featured extension. And as a super-fun bonus, FoxyTunes even comes with both an alarm clock and a sleep timer—perfect for the times when you want to take a little nap to the sweet sounds of Nine Inch Nails or something while a huge download finishes. Mmm.

Assuming you’ve enabled all the various music sharing mechanisms within iTunes, have you ever actually been curious to find out who’s connected to (and rocking out with) your system? While you can’t pull that much detail on the actual users attached to your iTunes via your network connection, you can at least see who has come into the jam session of your digital living room.
Head on over to Microsoft’s site and grab the application TCPView. Once you’ve done that, fire it up and scroll on through until you find the iTunes listings—and, yes, the program automatically updates when connections drop on and off. If you don’t recognize the IP address or local address, which means it’s not your system’s name or “localhost,” then you have a fan who’s listening to your iTunes as we speak. If you want to pull the person’s plug, right-click on the corresponding line and select “End Connection.”
Whoops!
Former Maximum PC Editor David Murphy doesn't mind iTunes that much, though he does hate iTunes' silly visualizations. Let's get some real graphics up in here, eh?