My personal source is Apple Lossless burned from my own CD collection played on a Fiio X3 digital audio player or iPod Classic (slowly morphing into my iPhone as progress marches on). As you can see, there are countless variations that can-and do-affect the audio quality of your music. Then there’s the music player: iPhone/Android smartphone, various iPods, digital audio players, computer, home stereo. Whether it’s vinyl, CD, iTunes, music burned in Apple Lossless, FLAC, Spotify/Pandora or even FM radio, the music has to come from somewhere. When reviewing headphones, earphones and speakers, there is always one constant throughout: A music source. If you buy something through the links on this page, we may earn a commission at no cost to you. This may work with content such as movies but not sure with apps if they can be transferred or not.We use affiliate links.
You could try logging into the persons device you want to authorize and download the app then sign out. It is probably to do with the developers and the backend pen pushing legal advisors causing this problem.Īlthough I can't say this is a direct answer like the "alternative solutions" provided above. This issue cannot specifically be aimed at the people who work at Apple to provide a service or work as a retail staff. So if you've got friends or family members that are over 18 and are known for their unstable credit card history then you might be in for a trainwreck of problems such as unauthorized payments and debt building up. The option to limit who can purchase using your Apple ID is only available to people under the age of 18 that are using the 'Family Home Sharing' so to speak.
The drawback is in the way Apple has developed the security features from my perspective.
Yes! 'Family Home Sharing' is an "alternative solution" to allowing other devices to see content you've bought using your Itunes account not theirs. If I am correct I do remember that ' back in the days.' you can still authorize iphone devices and Macs and PCs. There is no solution that answers this question specifically.
You can! You can authorize Macbook Pro to Imac, Imac to Macbook Pro, Mac to PC and vice versa. (Although they are "alternative solutions" around "authorizing" content on other devices other than Macs) it seems that Apple does have a drawback on this matter. You know after all the trouble I went through myself it seems that the solutions shown above. We have our phones in our hands, reps aren't robots, their people. You should also try being polite to people, you seem like you're not correct too often with having to point out some reps inability to blindly resolve an issue with someone's phone over the internet.
home sharing has my APPLE ID and I am still not authorized. That way there what has been tried can be told to the rep. It's also great if before someone pressed that option if they'd take note on a pad of paper. Working over the phone or internet is tough, it's our descriptions that allows them to assist us. I am sure if a rep had our phone in their hand they could have figured it out much quicker than you did. So as home sharing worked for you that's great.
Each individual's issue could be different depending on what they attempted while trying to authorize their phones. It's more like kind of strange a rep doesn't know all the options or settings a person has entered or changed in their phone.