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Quick Tip: How to Use Home Sharing in iTunes

Quick Tip: How to Use Home Sharing in iTunes

Tutorial Details
  • Topics: iTunes, Music, Home Sharing
  • Difficulty: Beginner
  • Estimated Completion Time: 10 Minutes

In the days before iTunes 9, users had to copy their old library from one computer to another using an external hard drive, or even a series of DVDs. Everyone knew it was possible to transfer it over the local network using either Ethernet or WiFi, but there wasn’t an official solution for it. When the ninth revision of Apple’s music player released, a fancy new feature called Home Sharing accompanied it. This finally brought the much-needed LAN transfer feature. I’m here today to teach you everything you’ll ever need to know about iTunes Home Sharing.


What It Lets You Do

Before I begin, let me explain what Home Sharing allows you to do. Basically, you can already transfer files between computers on a network using AirDrop. With Home Sharing though, you get a focused functionality that lets you move any iTunes content from one computer to any of the other five authorized on your iTunes Store account. Whether you need it at the office, home, or a friend’s house, it’s going to be right in iTunes and ready for you to use. Let’s get started.


Enabling Home Sharing

Switching on Home Sharing requires a quick log-in. Switching on Home Sharing requires a quick log-in.

First, you’re going to need an Apple ID as Home Sharing relies on it to ensure that you aren’t just giving your friends music. Once you’ve signed in to your account in the iTunes Store, click File, hover over the Home Sharing pop-out, and click Turn On Home Sharing. You’ll now be prompted to type in your Apple ID password to proceed. When finished, click the blue Turn On Home Sharing button and you’ll get a confirmation message reminding you that the feature is “for personal use” only.

The success screen. The success screen.

For reference, clicking the “No Thanks” button will not enable Home Sharing. You need an Apple ID to use the feature and you must sign in with it.


Using Home Sharing

Home Sharing a Thomas Newman album. Home Sharing a Thomas Newman album.

With this newly-enabled feature, you can transfer pretty much anything between your home computers. So, if a friend comes over and connects to your network, you can activate his computer with Home Sharing and then give him a few of your apps. The same goes for your wife, kids, and even coworkers around the office. If there’s a great book you want friends to read, set up a quick transfer without the use of a flash drive or file upload service.

Tip: You can have multiple computers using Home Sharing on the same network, so feel free to stream all your music.

Signing in to my Home Sharing account (left) and opening the library (right). Signing in to my Home Sharing account (left) and opening the library (right).

Something I haven’t touched on yet is the compatibility of Home Sharing. I’ve already said that it works with all computers, but what about your iOS devices? Pull one out and head to the Settings app, then scroll down and sign in with your Apple ID. Now all you have to do is go to the Music app, tap More, and tap Shared. All your items will pop up for streaming and all you have to do is tap them. Think of this functionality as a reverse Remote app.

You can also enable photo sharing for Apple TVs. You can also enable photo sharing for Apple TVs.

Lastly, you can share your library with an Apple TV on your network. To switch on the service, head to the Computers tab on your device and enter the Apple ID and password you used for Home Sharing on your computer. You can also share photos with your Apple TV by clicking the File button in iTunes on your computer, then hovering over Home Sharing and clicking the Choose Photos to Share with Apple TV button. From there you can a select events and individual photos, or just the whole library.


Not Working? Let’s Troubleshoot

Consider checking this box for continuous streaming capability. Consider checking this box for continuous streaming capability.

Is Home Sharing not working for you? Here’s a short checklist to make sure you have things set up correctly.

  • Make sure you’re running the latest version of iTunes available for your computer. You will also need iOS 4.3 or later to use the feature on a mobile device.
  • Your Apple TV must be a 2nd or 3rd generation model and running version 4.2.1 of the software.
  • Make sure you are using the same Apple ID for all your devices.
  • Check your network settings to see if all your devices are connected to the same router.
  • Turn off your firewall’s “Block all incoming connections” and “Allow only essential services” settings.
  • If your computer is sleeping, access may not be granted. Go to Energy Sharing in System Preferences and check the box beside “Wake for Wi-Fi network access”. Take note that this option is not available when your Mac is on battery power.

If none of that works, restart your computer and even your router if need be. Also make sure you’re in range of your router — you know, the usual routine for fixing poor connectivity.


Will You Use It?

Now that you know how to use Home Sharing, our question for you is, will you be making use of the feature in your daily life? Thanks for reading and I’ll see you in the comments!

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  • Jeff

    Issue I have with Home Sharing. I have a vast and eclectic library. Majority of the content not purchased from iTunes but a good amount is. I can stream and share all my music in my house on at least 10 different Apple devices. One of which is my younger daughters Apple TV in there room. Using this set up they have access to everything in my iTunes Library, EVERYTHING. I have not found a good way of setting limitation, in this case parental controls do not work. I may be able to set up the Apple TV with a different account and see if I can make smart selective chooses for sharing with them the PG stuff. any suggestions?

    • Johnny Winter

      Jeff, that’s an interesting and important point. I have a similar issue with films whereby I have set up a separate, old Mac mini G4 (running OS X 10.5 Leopard) in order to serve only kids films for my children. It still does not stop them accessing my Mac which has films that are not suitable for them (i.e.: rated PG-12/15/18 in UK) – so it’s not a perfect solution in the sense it requires extra hardware and does not prevent accessing of non-suitable content.

  • Dave

    How can we do this as-is but over the internet, away from our home networks?

    • http://papermail.me/ Jacob Penderworth
      Author

      You can’t duplicate this functionality on another network. However, you could use Dropbox to sync things or iTunes Match for music only.

    • Terry

      I agree, there has to be a way to do this over the internet through VPN, Server, or something else using native iOS apps and not Match.

  • Frank Strahan

    I’ve had Home Sharing set up for a long time but onlylast November added an iPhone. The problem I’m getting is that not all of my music shows up on the phone.
    My library has: Songs- c. 4200; Albums- c. 340 and an unknown, large number of artists. My phone shows around 4020 songs, only 39 albums and Zero artists. Also, some of the album art is mixed up. If I start playing a track on an album that’s not showing, the entire contents of the album will eventually populate the screen showing the album contents but the album will still not be visible in the Album list.
    I’ve restarted, reset and logged out and back in to my Apple ID but nothing works and it’s very frustrating. In addition, sometimes my movies will appear in the list but when I click on them to play (or resume) the phone displays “Cannot Open.”
    Any ideas? Thanks

    • http://papermail.me/ Jacob Penderworth
      Author

      That’s strange. Have you taken a look at your album’s info? Maybe it’s getting sorted weird. Try the Get Info button on the album.

      • Frank

        I’ve been using iTunes since 2003 and everything’s been trouble free until I got the iPhone.
        I’m not having any issues with iTunes, itself, only with “Home Sharing” as it appears on the phone.
        I wonder if it’s a compatibility issue? I’m running 10.6.8 on an early-2007 iMac and an iPhone 4 running, now, iOS 6.1.3.

        • http://papermail.me/ Jacob Penderworth
          Author

          It could be a compatibility issue. I honestly don’t know what the problem could be, other than that.

  • Wajid Thomas

    I use everyday but some songs or artists not showing on iOS devices for some reasons