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How to auto-fill your iPod nano: and train it for better music

Posted on Tuesday, January 2nd, 2007 at 11:14pm. #

Ever wondered what happens when you finish Solitaire on your iPod Nano?

If you’ve an iPod Shuffle, you’ll know that there’s an autofill function in iTunes, enabling you to automatically fill it with fresh stuff every day. But there’s no autofill for an iPod nano.

The good news is that, with a little bit of work, you can make this happen. AND it’ll retain your favourite tunes, AND it’ll allow you to avoid hearing your really crappy songs again. So if you’ve a New Year’s resolution to listen to better music, here’s a tip that’ll really work.

Here’s how to auto-fill and train your iPod nano (or, indeed, any other iPod if you like).

Set it up

- First, make a smart playlist (in the menu, hit File > New Smart Playlist), and in the box that appears, select My rating is * - - - - . Like the below. Click ‘OK’, and then name this smart playlist. I call it “crap songs”.
Crap songs

- Second, make another smart playlist, and select My rating is * * * * *. Just like the above, but with 5 stars. Click ‘OK’, and then name this smart playlist something useful. I name it “Nano”, because it’s all the great songs I want on there.

- Third, you need to make the main ‘autofill’ playlist. Mine looks like the below.
Autofill
Here’s what I was thinking…
-Time is between one minute and ten minutes: so I don’t get peculiar short spoken links between songs (as on Janet Jackson’s album ‘Janet’, for example, or Tenacious D’s first album, or the odd radio spots on some Wings albums).
-Playlist is not Nano: I will sync these top tunes anyway, so I don’t want it to duplicate these.
-Playlist is not crap songs: I never want these on my nano, so don’t give me those.
-Last played is not in the last 1 weeks: iTunes seems to have a concept of ‘random’ that I don’t agree with. No problem - if I hear a song, I’ll not hear it again for a week. Unless I put it into my favourites, of course.
-Artist does not contain / Genre does not contain - these parts are just to avoid any spoken word in my music.
- Limit it to a sensible size (I’ve chosen just under 2 meg here), and select it at random.
- And, live updating ensures it always remains fresh.

- Fourth, dock your iPod, and tell your copy of iTunes to automatically sync ‘Autofill’ and ‘Nano’ - i.e. the great songs you want to hear (’Nano’), and the ‘Autofill’ smart playlist.

Use it
Whenever you sync your iPod, you’ll get all your favourite songs, and some fresh ‘new’ songs too. So, here’s how to use it.

- Listen to your music on ’shuffle songs’. That way, you don’t know what’s coming next (and, more to the point, don’t have to think).
- Hear a great song you want to hear more often? Mark this song with five stars.
- Hear a song you never want to hear again? Mark this song with one star.
- Whenever you sync your iPod, those scores are transferred back to your computer, enabling iTunes to do its magic.

Discover more music
With all of this, you may want to discover more great music. Apart from your radio, of course, you might also want last.fm, or Pandora, which both allow you to listen to music that’s similar to music you already like. Last FM, and the iTunes music store, also offer you free music downloads to try.

Improve on this
You could also use smart playlists to ensure you rest certain songs if you’ve heard them too much - perhaps by setting a smart playlist to be “My rating = ***” AND “Last played is less than one month ago”, then building this in to the autofill smart playlist.

How do you program the music on your iPod? Let me know in the comments.

7 comments

Personal Players » How to train your iPod to play better music said at January 3rd, 2007 at 12:44pm

[...] How to auto fill your iPod nano with the songs you really like. If you’ve a New Year’s resolution to listen to better music, here’s a tip that’ll really work.read more | digg story [...]

Joff said at January 3rd, 2007 at 12:51pm

You could probably do something just like this with MediaMonkey Gold (paid-for version), using the AutoPlaylist function.

Good work.

Spinnetti said at February 23rd, 2007 at 4:03am

Ok, good tip..
Here’s my annoyance:
I have my favorites playlist, contacts, podcasts etc, but I want to fill whatever leftover space I have with my “Random 3 stars”.
Since the space I have available is not fixed, I constantly get some stupid error that says there is not enough room instead of what I want, which is copying all that will fit.. Any way to do that?

Thanks!

Rory P said at February 28th, 2007 at 6:48pm

great tip - do you know any way to autofill an ipod with whole albums?

I like listening to albums from start to finish rather than individual tracks. If you know a way to set itunes to fill my nano with different albums each time then i’d love to hear it!

cheers

A few months with an iPod Touch - blog - James Cridland said at November 22nd, 2007 at 11:34pm

[...] I’m using it as I did my iPod Nano - automatically filling it and training it to play me great music, as well as getting some great video podcasts, like the aforementioned Mahalo Daily (if I mention [...]

simon s said at November 23rd, 2007 at 6:20pm

Interesting how the iPod interface has moved on. I’m sure i couldn’t rate music on my old 1g pod (no on the fly playlist either).

the “limit to X mb” sorts the player size problem but like Rory it would be good to have a random selection of albums as an option. Select by album (rather than select by random) takes albums alphabetically starting at A until the space is filled. Not a lot of use to anyone.

It’s (not) all about the music - blog - James Cridland said at May 4th, 2008 at 10:55am

[...] Clear Channel’s new radio station, or The Arrow, or Virgin Xtreme, or any number of other “music jukebox” channels, just play a mix of music which is suboptimal, for me, to that available from a computer program or a website - or, even, from a tightly tuned iTunes. [...]

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