I really just don;t understand why DCs are everywhere. Its heavily DRMed. For us who made th emistake of actually buying things from iTunes who have rebuilt their computers or have reinstalled their operating system a few times, they're almost or are out of the amount of computers to have on their iTunes account so it quite pointless
-- they're almost or are out of the amount of computers to have on their iTunes account --
If you click on the Store menu in iTunes there is an item to de-authorize the current machine. If you have forgotten to do this, or had a machine die where you couldn't do this, and your machine count is up to 5, if you go into your iTunes account there will be a button to de-authorize all the machines on your account, and reset the number to zero.
You can then authorize up to five machines again. I've had to do this myself as I wasn't paying attention during upgrades, and when leaving a job and left a machine authorized.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
DeadPixel @ Jan 4th 2009 8:37AM
I really just don;t understand why DCs are everywhere. Its heavily DRMed. For us who made th emistake of actually buying things from iTunes who have rebuilt their computers or have reinstalled their operating system a few times, they're almost or are out of the amount of computers to have on their iTunes account so it quite pointless
Shawn Parr @ Jan 4th 2009 11:53AM
-- they're almost or are out of the amount of computers to have on their iTunes account --
If you click on the Store menu in iTunes there is an item to de-authorize the current machine. If you have forgotten to do this, or had a machine die where you couldn't do this, and your machine count is up to 5, if you go into your iTunes account there will be a button to de-authorize all the machines on your account, and reset the number to zero.
You can then authorize up to five machines again. I've had to do this myself as I wasn't paying attention during upgrades, and when leaving a job and left a machine authorized.