Here’s how to delete the U2 album you didn’t wish for

Lazada Philippines

We all knew that Apple is going release the U2 “Songs of Innocence” album for free as announced during the iPhone 6 event. Although we weren’t told that the said album is going to be a part of our playlist whether we like it or not.

apple u2

After numerous complaints over social networking sites and forums, Apple heard its customers and provided an easy way to remove the U2 album. So if you want to remove the free album on your device just follow the instructions below as written in the help page.

To remove this album:

1. Go to http://itunes.com/soi-remove.
2. Click Remove Album to confirm you’d like to remove the album from your account.
3. Sign in with the Apple ID and password you use to buy from the iTunes Store.
4. You’ll see a confirmation message that the album has been removed from your account.

The “Songs of Innocence” album is currently free in iTunes until October 13, 2014, and will be available for purchase the day after.

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The post Here’s how to delete the U2 album you didn’t wish for appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

Here’s how to delete the U2 album you didn’t wish for

Lazada Philippines

We all knew that Apple is going release the U2 “Songs of Innocence” album for free as announced during the iPhone 6 event. Although we weren’t told that the said album is going to be a part of our playlist whether we like it or not.

apple u2

After numerous complaints over social networking sites and forums, Apple heard its customers and provided an easy way to remove the U2 album. So if you want to remove the free album on your device just follow the instructions below as written in the help page.

To remove this album:

1. Go to http://itunes.com/soi-remove.
2. Click Remove Album to confirm you’d like to remove the album from your account.
3. Sign in with the Apple ID and password you use to buy from the iTunes Store.
4. You’ll see a confirmation message that the album has been removed from your account.

The “Songs of Innocence” album is currently free in iTunes until October 13, 2014, and will be available for purchase the day after.

{source} {via}

The post Here’s how to delete the U2 album you didn’t wish for appeared first on YugaTech | Philippines, Tech News & Reviews.

British Airways Launches Most Advanced App Yet

British Airways has seen an increase in the number of people booking via mobile devices by 290 per cent in just two years, and today it launches its most advanced smart phone app yet.

The intuitive app delivers personalised, relevant and time sensitive travel information at the touch of a button.

The free app, available from ba.com/apps has been created following extensive research in the UK, Europe, the US and Asia, is compatible with both iPhone and Android smartphones and will streamline the travel process for customers.

The home screen anticipates a customer’s likely need, placing the most relevant information at the top of the timeline. The tailored screen will also show customers a background image based on their next flight and flight information adjusted to reflect their journey stage; ranging from the ability to select their seat in advance, to day-of-travel essentials such as what gate they are departing from and the weather at their destination.

The new app also makes it even easier for British Airways customers to manage every aspect of their booking, whether on the road, in the air or in the comfort of their homes. They can select seats, change their booking, manage their Executive Club accounts and check in online. British Airways’ Mobile Boarding Pass usage has grown by more than 650 per cent in the last three years and the new app makes it even easier for customers to use their mobile phone as their boarding pass.

Kevin McQuillan, head of ba.com, said: “At British Airways, we have a long history of innovating and introducing the latest technology to help our customers. This latest app is another way we are making travel easier by delivering the latest and most relevant information to our customers at the tap of a finger.”

The launch of the new ba.com app is only part of British Airways’ wider commitment to invest more than £5bn in new aircraft, smarter cabins, elegant lounges, and new technologies to make life more comfortable in the air and on the ground.

Key features of the app include:

  •  Personalised homescreen, which will automatically update for the customers’ next flight including flight status, local time and weather at their destination, gate information, check-in options and seat information
  •  New side navigation bar, making it faster and easier to find your way around
  • Customers can easily view and manage all of their bookings
  • Easy access to all of their flight searches from any device
  • Add flights to calendar functionality
  • Lounge Wifi passwords for all of British Airways’ 60 dedicated lounges across the world
  • Access to up to the minute flight statuses
  • Showcase of the best fares to top destinations

The app is available to download for free from the iTunes App store and Android Market now, direct links can be found on ba.com/apps.

iTunes gives me the Blues

MUSIC ON THE IPHONE. I wanted to copy 4 albums on my Mac into my iPhone and iTunes insists on backing it up first, syncing things before sending the files. I went through the process for close to an hour to find, while I was already out on my run, that the files weren’t copied.

MUSIC ON THE IPHONE. I wanted to copy 4 albums on my Mac into my iPhone and iTunes insists on backing it up first, syncing things before sending the files. I went through the process for close to an hour to find, while I was already out on my run, that the files weren’t copied.

There is a special place in Inferno for iTunes.

A few minutes to my Saturday run this week, I decided on a change in music. I usually listen to NPR podcasts or Bob Dylan, Nina Simone and Amy Winehouse while running but yesterday I wanted to listen to The Lumineers and Madeleine Peyroux.

I listen to songs on the BlackBerry Z10 because its storage is expandable with a memory card (unlike that of the iPhone) and it’s easier to manage songs there — just a matter of mounting the phone’s memory card as a storage drive and adding or removing the songs.

But for running, I prefer using the iPhone because of RunKeeper. The BlackBerry Z10 has an equivalent app — Sports Tracker — but it often hangs and force closes in the middle of your run. Several times, it also stopped tracking the mileage.

I planned to start running at 5 p.m. and attached the iPhone to the MacBook Pro to sync the albums a few minutes before that time.

Manually managing songs on iTunes

Upon detection of the phone, the system went through its cycle: opening iTunes and syncing things and then opening up iPhoto to prompt me to import images on my phone that I haven’t backed up yet.

Because I configured iTunes to manually manage songs and playlists, I had to choose the albums for syncing.

The system then went through that maddening linear process of backing up the files, transferring apps, synchronizing things before transferring the songs.

Since the backing up of files took too long (this was at about 5:10 p.m. of my 5 p.m. run), I decided to cancel it thinking, mistakenly, that the files will still synchronize after the backup is canceled. Wrong.

I did a quick search on “how to add music to iphone without iTunes” and did a cursory browsing of the results. Most involved installing apps  in Windows but I didn’t want to deal with it.

I decided to restart syncing again (20 minutes after I was supposed to start my run) and went out for a short run “for warm up,” I told myself. I left the phone to sync and came back after about 10 minutes. It was still on Step 1 of 7, “Waiting for sync to start.”

I decided to give it more time and started my run in earnest. I went back 13 minutes later to find that it was on Step 2 of 7, still “Backing up.”

I continued running and came back in about 20 minutes to find no notifications on iTunes whatsoever. Thinking the sync had completed, I quickly detached the cable, attached the earphones and went out the door for my “long” run.

I sent a few text messages and was already nearing the gate of the subdivision when I opened the music app.

After more than an hour of trying to sync 4 albums of less than 50 songs and it wasn’t there. The only songs available on the phone were part of “The Very Best Of John Lee Hooker.” Curse you, iTunes. I love listening to John Lee Hooker but I looked forward to listening to the other artists for this run. I also found that iTunes had reinstalled some of the apps I uninstalled from the phone.

john-lee-hooker

John Lee Hooker is an influential blues guitarist, singer and song writer.

But there’s no use crying or cursing over unsynced songs. I went on with my run with John Lee Hooker, Boggie Chillin’.

Well my mama she didn’t ‘low me, just to stay out all night long, oh Lord
Well my mama didn’t ‘low me, just to stay out all night long

Midway into my run I was still cursing iTunes. I never use it outside of backing up my phone. To play songs on my Mac, I use Clementine. Android and BlackBerry makes management of songs so much easier: you can just add or remove song files directly to and from the phone memory or memory card.

And as if taunting me a third way into my run, the phone played the song that got me searching for John Lee Hooker in the first place:

It serve you right to suffer
Serve you right to be alone
Serve you right to suffer
Serve you right to be alone
Because you’re still livin’
In days done past and gone

The post iTunes gives me the Blues appeared first on Leon Kilat : The Tech Experiments.