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Probably because they have their own lossless codec (Apple Lossless). Which are supported by QuickTime, iPod and AirPort Express as well.
iTunes play FLAC with the help of Fluke though. ![]() |

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Probably because they have their own lossless codec (Apple Lossless). Which are supported by QuickTime, iPod and AirPort Express as well.
iTunes play FLAC with the help of Fluke though. ![]() |

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Fluke works soooo well. I tried it last night. Prior to using Fluke I had this crazy apple script thing going on for each flac or ogg I wanted dropped into iTunes. Utter mayhem (well not really but it sure wasn't elegant!) This though...what a find! Now then...let's get those FLAC files on to an iPod already!
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Actually after using songbird for 10 min I take back what I said about it. I can't figure out how to do gapless playback and I have some bug where it wont let me fast forward a track. Eh I guess I'll try to find something else to play my flac files.
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When you ran Fluke, before adding the files to iTunes, did you search them out in the director and "right click" then "open with" and search for fluke.app?
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I've realized why it didn't work now though. Since I just switched from a windows pc all my music is stored on a FAT32 based external hd. Mac OSX can read FAT32, but not write to it and apparently Fluke needs to edit these files to allow them to play in Mac OSX.
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Mac OS X can both read and write to FAT32. But perhaps you use NTFS file system? Which Mac OS X can't write to.
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I do it every day!
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Sure it can
I do it every day!I can't quite remember which option I went with but this is a good one: NTFS-3G: Stable Read/Write NTFS Driver |
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Mac OS X can both read and write to FAT32. But perhaps you use NTFS file system? Which Mac OS X can't write to.
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Sure it can
I do it every day!I can't quite remember which option I went with but this is a good one: NTFS-3G: Stable Read/Write NTFS Driver |
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