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David Lawrence: I am keeping these singers in shape. I had this from Brightstar1776, a patriotic E-mail writer. Hi I was just listening to your show and I heard a caller ask about syncing an iPod to more than one computer. I knew you could not do that but I just got a new computer and I wanted to transfer all my songs from my old computer to my new computer. This way I could just use my new computer for my iPod. Unfortunately I have over 300 songs on my iPod right now. Is there any other way to get the songs on to my new computer besides using CDs. A way to send it over the Internet would be great. While doing it over the Internet is slow. You don't want to do it over the Internet although you maybe talking about the same thing that I am about to share with you which is using a Local Area Network. You are not actually going out to the Internet if you are using two computers that are hooked into a router. You are just going between the two machines and it*s very, very fast depending upon what Ethernet card you have in the machine, what router you are using. 300 songs could be over within 5 minutes. So it*s very fast simply hook both machines upto a router, open up a share on each hard drive of their PCs or just allow sharing on each Mac if they are Macintoshes with the other machine and then open up the old computer*s hard drive on the desktop of the new one. Right, then navigate over to where your iTunes Music is, grab all the mp3s out of there and drag them over to the new machine. You don*t even have to drag them into the correct folder for iTunes just drag them to any directory on the new machine. Then what you do is you open up iTunes on the new machine and then under the Advance Menu there is an item called Consolidate Library and what that does is it goes out and searches for every mp3 and AAC and wave and AIF file anything that iTunes can play. It goes searching for it on your hard drive. Once it finds it all it consolidates it into the iTunes library on the new machine so there you go. You don*t have to send things out to you know over the Internet or anything. You can just do it right there on the Local Area Network that*s very fast even if you have plain old 10 megabyte Ethernet. It*s still real fast so. So that*s how to do it and I do appreciate your listening and thank you very much. I wonder what Bright Star 1776 stands for somebody who is a history channel buff no doubt. 180039 online is our telephone number 18003966546 let*s see if we can help Casey. Casey you are Online Tonight with David Lawrence.
Casey: Hi David thank you for taking my call.
David Lawrence: Sure how can I help you?
Casey: Okay I have had a laptop a Toshiba laptop for about a year and a half. I run Windows XP and I recently started having a problem where if I am running multiple programs or especially if I am using a streaming audio or if I am doing any video or playing any kind of game my laptop gets really hot on the bottom and it eventually like shuts down with no warning and I have no idea about that and then I can start it back up by the way and I can do some stuff but eventually the same thing happens.
[Transcriptions provided by Datalyst]Hour 1 | Hour 2 | Hour 3: << previous |1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | next >>
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After a 30 year career on radio in markets from New York to San Francisco to satellite and network, David H. Lawrence XVII decided to make a change. He hung up his headphones and retired from hosting 3 network/satellite radio shows to head to Los Angeles, to concentrate solely on acting in front of the camera.
Lili VonSchtupp* needed a fresh start. She moved to Washington DC and got her dream job. "I did affiliate relations for Online Tonight with David Lawrence. I slowly worked my way into the producer's chair by impressing David with my assets. (not those assets), my ability to make a CAT5 cable Ethernet cable, type (those of you in the chat room-shut up!) and work a phone system.
