Thursday, August 21, 2014

Stop Music app using tons of data on your iPhone or iPad


 
The Music app that comes built into every iPhone and iPad is responsible not only for storing your music collection from iTunes, in addition, it houses iTunes Complement and enables you to access iTunes Stereo, both which can-eat great levels of information. And that is not checking any iTunes within the Cloud acquisitions you possibly can make. If you should ben’t cautious, the Audio application can easily consume during your providers information allocation. If this really is a problem you have been operating into, here are a few methods you may suppress just how much information the Audio application uses! 



1. Disable the Music app from using cellular data 

The quickest and easiest way to keep the Music app for eating through your data plan is to restrict its access to only Wi-Fi. Doing this, you'll still be able to listen to any content that is physically stored on your iPhone or iPad. You just won't have access to anything that relies on data such as iTunes Match, iTunes in the Cloud purchases, and iTunes Radio. 
1. Launch the Settings app on your iPhone or iPad. 
2. Tap on Cellular. 
3. Scroll down and under the Use Cellular Data For section, find Music and turn the setting to Off — the list should be in alphabetical order. 


 

That's it. The Music app should no longer consume any cellular data. 

2. Sync music you listen to often instead of streaming it 

If you don't want to go nuclear but would still like to conserve some cellular data, syncing music you listen to often instead of relying on iTunes Match, is a great way to do just that. Simply sync over your favorite playlists, artists, and albums from your iTunes library on your computer. Or download them while on Wi-Fi with iTunes in the Cloud. This will minimize the amount of data your iPhone or iPad pulls. Then when you want to access music in iTunes Match, you're only doing so for things you don't listen to quite as often. 

3. Only download music from iTunes in the Cloud over Wi-Fi 

If you purchase a lot of music from iTunes, you may notice that you can download and delete it on demand. If you have fast data speeds, this makes it extremely convenient to download music and then delete it to save storage on your iPhone or iPad. 

I know many people that do this on a regular basis. Just keep in mind that each time you download an album over cellular, it most likely consumes several megabytes of data at a time. So if at all possible, avoid downloading music when you're on cellular and opt for Wi-Fi instead. 

4. Limit how often you use iTunes Radio 

Like any other streaming music service, iTunes Radio uses a data connection in order to serve up radio stations on your iPhone or iPad. If you use the service frequently, this is most likely the reason you're using so much data within the Music app. Just like iTunes in the Cloud purchases, limiting iTunes Radio usage unless you're on Wi-Fi is a huge way to mitigate how much data the Music app eats. 


5. Disable automatic downloads for music 

If you purchase music on your computer via iTunes or through another device regularly, your iPhone or iPad may be downloading it over cellular without you knowing it. Luckily, there's a super easy way to prevent this behavior from happening by disabling music from downloading automatically. Or if you don't want to completely disable automatic downloads, just disable the option to use cellular data for all automatic downloads. You may find you save even more data. 

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