Q: Not all songs from a playlist are synced to iPod nano
I've checked a checkbox to synchronize a playlist consisting of 13 songs to my iPod shuffle, but only 2 of them are synchronized.
Screenshot of a playlist in iTunes: https://i.imgur.com/V5MJEx6.png
Screenshot of a playlist on iPod shuffle: https://i.imgur.com/4k1q5Gk.png
Proof that whole playlist is checked to be synced: https://i.imgur.com/B8Kp5Dt.png
Songs play fine in iTunes itself on my computer. I certainly wouldn't say songs are in their "native" format for iTunes, since I had to download them from youtube and convert for iTunes, but they are there and playeable, so I would expect them to be transferred.
Is this a known issue and how would I resolve it? Thank you!
MacBook Pro with Retina display, OS X Yosemite (10.10.1)
Posted on May 16, 2016 10:15 AM
It makes sense that the AAC song syncs.
I think "MPEG-4" is the problem here. That's not MP3 and it's not exactly AAC either (although related). MPEG-4 usually describes a video file, not audio file. These are audio-only files, correct? MPEG-4 is not on the list of supported formats for iPod nano Audio Playback, according to the tech specs for the most recent iPod nano
https://www.apple.com/ipod-nano/specs/
Since these songs play in iTunes, you can try converting these MPEG-4 files to AAC in iTunes. First, go to iTunes preferences General pane. Click Import Settings button. Set it to Import Using - AAC Encoder, with Setting - iTunes Plus, then OK.
Go to the playlist with these songs, and select the MPEG-4 songs at the same time. From the menu bar, File -> Create New Version -> Create AAC Version. In the playlist that syncs to the iPod, replace the MPEG-4 songs with the AAC versions. Try syncing iPod again.
since I had to download them from youtube and convert for iTunes
The above method (using iTunes) converts an audio file that was already converted. That may reduce audio quality. Alternately, you can redo whatever conversion method you previously used, to create either MP3 or AAC audio files from your original source files. Another way to convert is using QuickTime Player, if you can open and play the original source (video?) files using QuickTime Player; from the menu bar, File -> Export -> Audio Only. This process creates AAC audio files.
Posted on May 18, 2016 2:36 AM