It's not ideal, but it works without rooting your phone. This is the workaround that I've come up with. However, with the restriction on writing to the SD card by non-system apps, starting with KitKat, you're out of luck if you use an external SD card for your media. The methods above worked great prior to Android KitKat 4.4.2. I realize that this is an old question, but I found it when I was searching for a method to use for 4.4.2 KitKat, so others may as well. Loving Ubuntu and trying to get out of the grip Windows and OS X had on me for the longest time. When I edit my song information will it edit the ID3 tag? If so then I can manage my musics ID3 tags via Rhythmbox, and then manually transfer it. Now, I know a lot of my ID3 tags in my music library are not what I like them to be (when I first launched Rhythmbox I had to rename a lot of stuff) and I'm really OCD about all that. Worst case scenario I can manually transfer all my music (trying to completely get rid of Windows here). Obviously neither iTunes nor DoubleTwist work on Ubuntu so I would like to find some alternative. I am spoiled by the likes of DoubleTwist on Windows with which I could sync my iTunes library with wirelessly. Rhythmbox will crash when I try and sync and on Banshee I get a slew of errors. Luckily, Ubuntu comes with some drivers preinstalled so I can access my phones memory easily through nautilus, however Rhythmbox and Banshee don't seem to like it as much. The Galaxy Nexus uses MTP which makes general use a bit of a pain.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |