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DESCRIPTION
iVolume... Tired of constantly adjusting your music's volume?
iVolume ensures that all your songs play at the same volume level.
iVolume calculates the volume perceived by the human ear for each song of your iTunes music collection. Thereby iVolume gets the most out of the approved Replay Gain algorithm and adjusts your songs accordingly.
Compatible With Your Digital Life:
iVolume integrates seamlessly with iTunes on Mac and PC, iPod, iPhone, Apple TV, FrontRow and AirTunes. Most popular audio file formats like MP3, M4A/AAC, AIFF and Apple Lossless are supported.
Blazingly Fast:
iVolume takes advantage of newest technologies to fully utilize every core of modern multiprocessor machines for optimal performance.
Avoids Unnecessary Work:
iVolume remembers all results ever calculated. Apply changed adjustment settings without the need for re-analyzing your songs.
Keeps Albums Intact:
By using a sophisticated album detection algorithm iVolume optionally adjusts albums as a whole to keep the intention of the artist. This method is particularly suitable for adjusting gapless live albums.
Highly Configurable:
Create groups to apply individual fine tuned settings to any specified subset of your songs.
Awesome Usability:
All the features above are fun and incredibly easy to use through a modern and clear user interface.
WHAT'S NEW
Version 3.5:
- Compatibility: iVolume now fully supports iTunes 9 and Snow Leopard.
- Good bye 'No iTunNORM Tag'! You never have to deal with this annoying warning from the past again. Just forget about it. iVolume now fixes that automatically in a smart way.
- Reliability: Other errors like 'File Not Found' are also reduced to a minimum.
- Performance: Overall performance and stability enhancements.
- Maintenance: Various other improvements and bug-fixes under the hood.
REQUIREMENTS
- Mac OS X 10.4 or later
- iTunes 7 or later
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| iVolume User Reviews (65 posts) | Write A Review |
 | Sep 17 2009 |
LARRY R The staff that updated iVolume should be applauded for responding so quickly to the volume adjustment problem that was created by iTunes 9. Using the new updated version of iVolume I was able to go into my iTunes, selected all the songs that iVolume was unable to previously adjust (due Tag issues) and it adjusted everyone of them, quickly and without a single error. Congratulations for work well done. Everyone needs to recognize mani.de efforts. (Version 3.5) | |
| [ Reply ] | |
 | Jul 30 2009 |
CRWRIGHT I really like the results this produces - and it was great value with the MacUpdate promo. As I'd already bought it when it went on sale by itself, I have two licenses now... and still don't feel cheated. Having said that, the user interface needs a fair bit of work to make it meet the quality of the underlying programming. Just putting a glossy "piano black" top on a floating window and a side pane of "Groups" does not an consistent Apple interface make. Aside from some very questionable aesthetics ("glossy" black title bar? "Glowing" blue text? What on earth are the earbuds floating in space for?), there are some fundamental navigation problems that need addressing. Starting with preference for "Use standard MacOS window" would be great. For a start, why is any search reset when any function is called? If I search for U2 so that I can level new tracks I know I added... and I select them... and I click "Start", WHY would the search be cleared - returning me to a full list of all 17,000 tracks in my iTunes library? That's nuts. I usually want to watch the tracks being adjusted without doing a second search or scrolling through 12,000 tracks. Just don't clear the search box automatically - that's what the "X" at the end of the box is for. It even happens when I call "adjust tracks selected in iTunes". Not cleverly executed. "Groups" is no substitute for a quick search & adjust. You shouldn't need to create a new "group" every time you want to isolate a set of tracks to level and check to see how much they were adjusted. In fact I still can't work out what groups are really useful for. I understand the general idea, but they really ought to function more like smart playlists and be dynamic search groups. Having to drag/drop or copy tracks to a new group each time I create it makes them much less useful. I would really like a "Live" group in iVolume to contain all tracks that have "live" in the title, genre or gouping tags to be in that group all the time. Updating the library/links. There has to be a better way to reload the contents of the iTunes library than quitting and re-launching iVolume. The MacOS has supported system events that notify applications of changes in files since... oh... like System 6.0.2 or something earlier. Not knowing the database has been changed and updating the information in resident memory is a bit sloppy. Even if that's tricky to add - just a button that re-loads the library manually would be great. Don't make me quit/restart every time a track is added to iTunes. Similarly - there has to be a better way to handle "No iTunesNORM tag". Maybe it will require a script to tell iTunes to add one, but that should probably be on the list of future things to tidy up. Still and all - I like the results - it works - and it's a good effort. It just needs a bit of spit and polish (and less polish on the title bar). [BTW - you can easily remove the absurd earbuds yourself (but not the piano black & glowing text) if you just "Show Package Contents" and look for "PhoneLeft.png" and "PhoneRight.png". Delete. You're done. Won't cause any harm in my experience. If you didn't understand that, probably best to leave it alone.] (Version 3.1.5) | |
| [ 1 Reply - Reply ] | |
Replies:
 | Sep 22 2009 |
REOWEN I agree completely. The application does an excellent job of setting levels and I really appreciate the ability to set the volume for a whole album. However, the GUI needs to work. Thank you for the instructions for removing the hideous and intrusive earphones. (Version 3.5) | |
 | Aug 1 2008 |
STORMCHILD If it's really true that iVolume 2 will no longer work properly with iTunes 7.7.1 and newer, then that really stinks. Because quite frankly, $30 for this one-trick pony is a bloody insane ripoff, and I simply won't pay it. It was well worth the $7 it originally cost, and I was even willing to pay again when it doubled in v2, but the developer is getting awfully greedy now, and $30 is absolutely RIDICULOUS -- especially when you consider that the core "work" done by this app is done by an open source algorithm painstakingly written by SOMEBODY ELSE, given away for free, then taken by this schmuck and wrapped in a simple GUI that gets unnecessarily gunked up with CPU-wasting and pointless animations while the price -- for the exact same algorithm and results (which is all the work of someone ELSE) -- doubles every release. I no longer recommend this to anyone, and I will never support this guy ever again. (Version 3.1.1) | |
| [ 9 Replies - Reply ] | |
Replies:
 | Aug 1 2008 |
DOUG S. Pretty harsh review. Can you at least tell us who that someone "Else" is? (Version 3.1.1) | |
 | Aug 1 2008 |
MJHARPER While I agree with some of what you saythe price for exampleI think you go too far. After all, you're essentially complaining that an old (unsupported) version of iVolume no longer works with the latest version of iTunes. And that isn't the case because the developer of iVolume changed something in a cynical attempt to get you to upgrade, but because Apple changed something in iTunes. If you don't want to pay for the upgrade, fair enough. But don't complain that unsupported software is unsupported. (Version 3.1.1) | |
 | Aug 1 2008 |
MJPW the actual site is http://replaygain.hydrogenaudio.org, not .com. I visited it and it looks as though it hasn't been updated since 2001. So iVolume just a wrapper for someone else's code. Code that was made available for free specifically so other people could build their own software around it. You could say that Mac OS X is just a fancy wrapper for BSD Linux and refuse to pay for that, too. If you can do it yourself, that's fine, but most people could not, and if you have any size of music library at all, it's probably worth the cost of a couple of MP3 albums to upgrade to a product that has vastly improved from one version to the next. (Version 3.1.1) | |
 | Aug 1 2008 |
MJPW oops, meant BSD Unix. you get my point. (Version 3.1.1) | |
 | Aug 2 2008 |
STORMCHILD Certainly. The "someone else" is the author of ReplayGain, the algorithm that does all the work which iVolume takes credit for. See for yourself: http://replaygain.hydrogenaudio.org And as for the second comment, I think you are missing the point of this software altogether if you don't see the problem here. Once you have adjusted thousands of songs (in my case, over 10,000), you have to continue adjusting every new song you add to your library. And you have no choice but to continue upgrading to new versions of iTunes, since they are required to support new iPods and iPhones and -- even if you don't buy new hardware -- iTunes updates are required to keep up with general OS X updates. So, in order to keep the benefit of having adjusted my entire library with this software -- which I have now paid for twice already -- I have to keep paying for essentially the exact same software over and over, and the bloody price DOUBLES every time, with very poor discounts offered to existing users. And is there any way to simply stop using it and remove it's adjustments so that songs will at least be somewhat similar in volume via the original iTunes-generated Sound Check values? No, of course not, because iVolume has written it's values directly into the ID3 tags of every song. It does have a restore feature, but if iVolume 2 doesn't work with iTunes 7.7.1, I am already completely screwed, as there is no way to revert to an older version of iTunes without an enormous amount of work and hassle. So I am left in a position where I either suck it up and pay more for another "upgrade" that produces the exact same results as before -- and is not ANY faster on my machine -- not to mention the fact that the upgrade price is more than I paid for versions 1 & 2 put together. It's an absolute outrage, considering all the advanced math that does the psychoacoustic analysis was not even written by this greedy butthead who merely wrapped a GUI around it. Now I have to come up with my own solution for applying the same algorithm to my songs, and believe me, if I do find the time to do this, I will make sure to give it away for free so I can put this clown out of business and make him get a real job. (Version 3.1.1) | |
 | Aug 2 2008 |
STORMCHILD I'm testing iVolume 2.5.3 on iTunes 7.7.1, and it appears to work fine. I don't know why the developer suggested it would be mandatory to upgrade to iVolume 3 to continue using it with iTunes 7.7.1+ -- maybe I just misinterpreted the comment in the release notes. But, as far as I can tell, iVolume 2 still works. I appreciate some of the replies to my comments. I'm not trying to be a jerk about this, just frustrated with the situation. Maybe when I can afford a new multicore Intel machine, I will consider trying iVolume 3 again; it would be easier for me to swallow the horrible upgrade pricing if the performance is actually that much better. As it stands, I get nothing whatsoever out of the new version on my PowerBook. I just don't understand why a developer would want to piss off and alienate their customers with such greedy upgrade pricing. You may make a few extra bucks now, but in the long run it will cost you. (Version 3.1.1) | |
 | Aug 2 2008 |
STORMCHILD And no, Mac OS X is NOT a fancy wrapper for BSD. That's not even a gross oversimplification -- it's just plain wrong. *Darwin* is built upon pieces from several different BSD variants -- and you may download and use Darwin for free. Darwin only forms the basic foundation of Mac OS X, and even then, the kernel -- the core "brain" of the entire OS -- was written by Avie Tevanian, an engineer at Apple. They did not take an existing kernel from another Unix variant, it's their own work. The full Mac OS X operating system is 90% the work of Apple. So that's a rather false analogy, and completely irrelevant to this discussion. (Version 3.1.1) | |
 | Aug 2 2008 |
MJPW I think 2.5.3 probably still works in most situations, as there are Leopard-specific fixes in it, but the developer no longer makes that version available on his Web site. Since I hadn't kept up with the updates (I think I had 2.5 on my HD), in order to run iVolume in Leopard I basically had no choice but to upgrade iVolume or downgrade my OS. I was satisfied with the new version and the upgrade cost, but I still think developers should continue to make older versions available on their site so people can update or reinstall the software they've already paid for. (Version 3.1.1) | |
 | Aug 4 2008 |
MJHARPER I've been using iVolume since version 1.0 too, and like you I have about 15,000 songs in my library. I don't think I'm missing the point though (correct me if I am). As mjpw said, open source is open to people to put a wrapper around (although you're right to point out that OS X isn't really a valid analogy). Also, unless I'm much mistaken, the developer of iVolume had to change the actual algorithm (or at least, which algorithm was used) when the Adjust by X% option stopped working a while ago. So it isn't simply a case of wrapping somebody else's work, since there is also quality control and so on involved. and making sure that your app does what it's supposed to. But all that's beside the point. There should be a reset adjustment, actually. In iVol3, you can select 'Forget Analyzing Results' from under the Tracks menu, and I'm sure there was something similar in iVol2. And personally, I would probably turn off the iTunes sound adjustments altogether if I couldn't use iVol, since the track-by-track thing blows. I agree about the money. I paid $9 for 1.0, with an upgrade of $7 for 2.0, and now $20 for 3.0. That's pretty steep. But 3.0 was re-written from the ground up, and is being improved with every release at the moment. Since 3.0 was released, I'd say it's become about twice as fast (on Intel). I imported 15-odd albums earlier, and iVol scanned and corrected the _entire_ iTunes library in about 5 minutes. And plenty of features have been added. I'm not writing a review, but I've been using 3.0 since the day it was released and I'm happy with it. Some of the featureslike organising albums according to whether they've been set as gapless, and listing the entire contents of your library when iVol loadsare fantastic. The interface is indeed a little too flashy, but I'd say it's just part of the Delicious generation, rather than a problem with this app specifically. What it comes down to, I think, is whether you think that the app is still worth it. I do. I agree that the $20 was a bit muchin my book, previous users should never have to pay more 50% to upgradebut my music collection has always felt better for iVolume, and still feels better for it. I thought hard about the upgrade fee, and decided that iVolume was still worth the price of a CD to me (about 16) and so I upgraded. iVol1 came out in 2004, iVol2 in 2006, and iVol3 in 2008. In the end, I feel that $20for probably 2 years of usefor an app I will use as much as this is worth it. I have given up on apps with ridiculous upgrades strategies before (Photo2Movie and Toast). If you're at the same point with iVol, I know where you're coming from. But complaints about upgrade policies still don't constitute a review of the application itself. (Version 3.1.1) | |
 | Aug 19 2008 |
EDSTATE First of all, yes, this is a "one trick pony". However, this is a pony that Apple, and iTunes should do a much, much better job with than they do. So... as someone who makes a lot of mixes, burns CDs for people, and listens to a lot of music, $30 isn't so bad. I LOVED version 1.0, but I dinged the DEV in a review here when 2.0 came out, because of the "turn on soundcheck" function. Apparently when the 4th gen iPods came out, they closed the "loophole" the dev was using, so he had to go that route. So now this version has come out, and at first I was VERY skeptical about plunking for more $$. However, I downloaded the demo, and.. lo-and-behold... it IS re-built from the ground up. The interface is much improved, and it now has the ability to process many songs at once. Yay. It also produces much better results than 2.0. And while still not perfect, it's still better than iTunes "stock" soundcheck. A couple of features that need a'implimentin': Some way of dealing with "no tag" songs. ...updating the tags in iTunes only fixes a scant few of these. More songs than you'd think do NOT have the proper tags. Some way of dealing with iTunes AAC protected songs, and podcasts. Otherwise, a worthy update. A step forward. Stable, fast, and pretty too. (Version 3.1.1) | |
| [ 1 Reply - Reply ] | |
Replies:
 | Aug 24 2008 |
STORMCHILD Sadly, I think the only way to deal with DRM-protected tracks in iTunes is simply not to buy any. Now that iTunes offers a decent amount of songs in iTunes Plus format, I just stick to those. If I want to buy something that's not available in iTunes Plus, I go look for it on Beatport, Juno, Amazon or elsewhere. For me, the problem isn't limited to being unable to adjust the SoundCheck level with iVolume; DRM-protected tracks cannot be played by any other software either, so I can't play them when DJing (with Ableton Live or Serato Scratch). I realize you can burn them to disc and reimport them, but that's a pretty ridiculous strategy if you buy a lot of music. Boycott DRM. (Version 3.1.1) | |
 | Jul 26 2009 |
TINKERBUNS MCGINGERCUDDY Being able to access your playlists in iTunes, from within iVolume, would be a nice feature as well. (Version 3.1.5) | |
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 | Jul 26 2009 |
TINKERBUNS MCGINGERCUDDY Is there a way for iVolume to check only new tracks that have been added to iTunes instead scanning your entire library each time? (Version 3.1.5) | |
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 | May 31 2009 |
BABY BLOC Are there other developers who are charging an extra "License Code Lookup" fee so you can ask them to lookup the license code if you forget it? I've never had to do that before. Never occurred to me it was a service that "cost" much. Maybe it takes a lot of time? (Version 3.1.4) | |
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 | Dec 20 2008 |
QUICKBEN I'm not going to give this app a rating as I take full responsibility for not reading the user's guide, etc as I should have. As far as working, it seems to do a fine job. My problem lies in the comment replacement this app makes. Thousands of comments about songs dating back several years--all gone (the word 'furious' comes to mind in this situation). Does this app really have to replace comments with their own drivel? If you don't comment your songs, then go for it. If you do, I cannot recommend it. (There is a preference check that allows one to turn off comment overwrites, but if you click it a warning message pops up stating the app won't work properly if it can't write over comments.) (Version 3.1.4) | |
| [ 1 Reply - Reply ] | |
Replies:
 | Dec 21 2008 |
QUICKBEN Please disregard my post. The developers sent me a work-around to this problem. My apologies! (Version 3.1.4) | |
 | Nov 9 2008 |
XPLICIT I tried v3 today and I'm very disappointed. Completely unintuitive, I can't figure out how it works. No problem with v2.5.3, not at all: Select tracks in iTunes, switch to iVolume, hit CMD-Enter and there you go. Not with v3: Why is it necessary to comlicate things like that? I cannot recommend iVolume v3. iVolume v2.5.3 was way better. (Version 3.1.4) | |
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 | Jul 28 2008 |
MJPW I thought the upgrade price was steep, too, but then I used it. I used to use the old one and it was just okay--it did an important job, but not particularly elegantly. And eventually the issue with the iTunNORM tags made it virtually unusable. The new one is ridiculously fast compared to the older versions if you have a CPU that can take advantage of it. I'm on a Mac Pro and it is on pace to power through a 21,000-song collection in about 8 hours, even while using the computer for other tasks. In the old version, you're looking at 3-4 days for the same size library. It also has not crashed once--the old one used to crash every few hours (semi-understandable considering the amount of data being processed for such a long period of time, but still annoying). As for the iTunNORM tag errors, I finally broke down and tried the process outlined on their Web site, and while it does take time, I didn't find it particularly "painful"--you're just creating a temporary library, deleting it and going back to your old one like nothing happened. And after doing that, I haven't seen a single one of those errors, so it must have worked. The one remaining caveat is that protected iTunes tracks can't be analyzed. But they can still use the default iTunes SoundCheck adjustments, which are imperfect but better than nothing. I'm glad this has been upgraded. It's absolutely essential if you listen to your tracks at work or on an iPod and don't want to be changing the volume every time a new song comes on. (Version 3.1) | |
| [ 1 Reply - Reply ] | |
Replies:
 | Aug 1 2008 |
MJPW update: by the time the 21,000 tracks were processed (in about 7 hours), there were actually nine files with the no-tag error. Most of them were downloaded from, shall we say, non-official sources, so they're probably just bad files. Before performing the procedure listed on their Web site, I'd say about 75 percent of the tracks went un-analyzed. (Version 3.1.1) | |
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