Maria Speaks Episode 33: Managing iTunes Downloads
Transcript:
Although iTunes doesn’t need an Internet connection to work, its real strength lies in its ability to get new content from the iTunes Music Store: songs, music videos, television shows, movies, and, of course, podcasts. You interact with iTunes to choose the content you want to buy or subscribe to and iTunes downloads that content to your computer. You can then update your iPod to add the new content.
One of the new features in iTunes 7 is the ability to manage downloads. This is especially useful when you subscribe to podcasts and don’t update as frequently as you should. Or if you’re waiting for multiple downloads and want one of them to finish up first.
In this article, I’ll provide some tips and tricks for using the Downloads window to manage your iTunes downloads. Although I’ll concentrate on using this feature for podcasts, most of what I cover applies to all of your iTunes downloads.
Getting Podcast Files
When you subscribe to a podcast, iTunes does several things. First, it adds the podcast to the iTunes Podcasts window (Figure 1). Next, it checks to see what episodes are available and it lists them in the podcast window. Then, depending on how iTunes Preferences are set, it begins downloading the most recent episode.

Figure 1: The Podcasts window with a newly subscribed podcast.
Unless preferences are set otherwise, iTunes won’t download all of the available podcast episodes for a newly subscribed podcast. Instead, it’ll list the available episodes with a Get button beside each name. You can’t listen to an episode until you “get” or download it. You can manually start a download by clicking the Get button beside the episode you want. That changes the episode name from gray to black and displays an orange animated icon that indicates it’s being downloaded or a gray icon that indicates it has been added to the download queue. Figure 2 shows an example.

Figure 2: Five items set up to download; three in progress.
Managing Downloads
iTunes can download up to three items (podcast episodes, songs, movies, etc.) at a time. You know when iTunes is downloading content because the Downloads item appears in the Source list under Store. The number of items in the download queue appear beside it and, if downloads are in progress, an animated icon appears beside the count. You can see all this in Figure 2.
Clicking the Downloads item in the source list displays the Downloads window (Figure 3). This windows shows the entire download queue and a progress bar for each item being downloaded. Items being downloaded appear in bold type. Items not being downloaded appear in normal type. When an item download is completed, the item disappears from the list and another item download begins.

Figure 3: The Downloads window with three items being downloaded and two waiting.
Suppose you have limited bandwidth and want to visit YouTube while iTunes is downloading content. You can pause one or more of the downloads in progress, thus freeing up download bandwidth so you can view YouTube videos without pauses or hesitations.
To pause one download, in the Downloads window, click the pause icon at the far right end of the row for the item you want to pause. The item turns to normal type and a resume icon appears beside it. If another item is waiting in the queue, that item begins to download (Figure 4).

Figure 4: When you pause an item, iTunes begins downloading the next item in the queue.
To pause all downloads, click the Pause All button in the bottom-right corner of the Downloads window. All items turn to normal type with a resume button beside them (Figure 5).

Figure 5: You can pause all items if you like.
You can probably figure out the rest. To resume a single download, click the resume button for that item. To resume all downloads, click the Resume All button at the bottom-right corner of the Downloads window. Keep in mind that only the top three items in the queue will resume downloading.
What’s neat about this is that when you resume a download, it resumes from the point at which it stopped. So you don’t have to start all over again. That saves lots of time and makes this feature very convenient.
You can also use this feature to change the order of downloads. Simply drag the item you want to download first to the top of the list (Figures 6 and 7). That gives that item the highest priority. You may need to Pause All and then Resume All downloads to restart the download process with your highest priority downloads to be completed first.

Figure 6: Drag an item to a new position in the queue.

Figure 7: When you release the mouse button, it moves into position.
To speed up the download of a high-priority file, move it to the top of the list, pause all downloads, and then start the download for just the first item on the list. iTunes will take advantage of all available bandwidth to download the file. Since it doesn’t need to share bandwidth with two other files, the download should (theoretically) take one third the amount of time.
If you pause one or more items, don’t forget to resume the download. If you don’t resume it, it’ll remain in the download queue until you do.
And if you change your mind about downloading an item, you can delete it from the queue. Simply select it and press Delete (Mac OS) or Backspace (Windows). To never download it, you must delete it from the Podcasts window (Figure 1) the same way.
Conclusion
As you can see, this new feature offers a lot of flexibility when downloading content from the Internet into iTunes. Play around with it and see how it can help you take control of your iTunes downloads.
Is there a way of stopping itunes from downloading 3 files at a time? I find that my net access really slows down when itunes has a queue lined up.
I would prefer if itunes only downloaded one file at a time, therefore giving other applications more bandwidth.
I’m currently running the windows version of itunes v7.
Thanks
I don’t know of any way other than manually stopping all downloads and then starting them up one by one. Maybe another reader has a solution?
I have to keep stopping the downloads in the list when I want a single file to get priority. Perhaps it is because I have the iTunes preferences in Podcasts set to
“Check to new episodes: every hour” and to
“Download All” when there are new episodes.
The download queue seems to get reset after an hour or so, and am guessing the preferences might be why mine behaves differently.
Unfortunately, I am currently stuck with dialup and every time the ISP terminates all previous parts of the interrupted downloading files are lost. It is nice that iTunes will automatically restart the downloads when it is launched, but it is a restart from the beginning — iTunes cannot resume the download from the point it was stopped. Quite the nuisance.
Hi Maria,
I recently converted to using iTunes to manage my music library, and still getting used to the itunes “way”. Your posting is a great help.
Maybe you have some ideas for one problem I am having?
I find that for certain podcasts I get interrupted downloads quite often. itunes just seems to accept this and catalogue the partial download. Problem is, I can find no way to tell itunes to either resume or re-download the podcast!
Trying to fix this I ran into another problem: I tried deleting one of the podcast episodes (hoping itunes would doanload it again). But now itunes seems to have permanently forgotten about that episode completely … updating the feed does not bring it back.
Any hints, or is it the case that itunes podcast support is just so basic that I shouldn’t expect it to be able to handle this kind of situation?
I’ve never had iTunes interrupt a download, so I can’t advise you from experience. I will confirm that if you delete a podcast from the Podcast list, it’s as if it never existed. The only way to get it back on the list is to delete the podcast subscription and resubscribe to it. (At least that’s the only way I know.)
Back to your initial problem, does the interrupted download remain in the Downloads window (Figure 3 above)? If so, there should be some kind of button there to resume it.
You might be able to delete it from THAT window and then use the Get button in the Podcasts list to restart the download.
Hope this helps! Sorry I couldn’t provide more definite info. Let us know how you do.
I solve problem of grayed out, recent podcast downloads by closing and restarting iTunes.
Paul,
After you delete the partial podcast click on the triangle while holding the shift (windows) or option (mac) key to revive the list to have the item you deleted show up, but this time you can re download it. I still wish iTunes would be smart enough to know it wasn’t a complete download in the first place, but that’s for next time.
John
my issue is the same, i cant d/l my episodes fully b/c it keeps restarting, is there ne thing useful i can do about this problem to fix it?
Please dear you people who write iTunes how-to-s. Try tu use it for a while on a slow connection! Then you WILL run into problems. Almost every day I will experience that if my connection drops out for a short moment (too short for me to notice), iTunes goes “oh, what´s this? No connection?” and stops my podcast download. Yes, stop it. No auto-resume, no keep the 97% it already downloaded (granted, on some it does). I never thought about these things when I lived in the 1st world with my 2 M/b line. Now I live in the 3rd world with approx. 265 kb, and iTunes is now a nightmare. Is it the line or version 7? I just now had Macbreak Weekly 90% downloaded when it stopped and I had to restart it again. I have yet to see any professional reviewer write about this, and I´ve been doing a LOT of searching on this topic. Puuh, thanks for listening…!
I have the same problem as the last guy, why is there no one talking about this anywhere? I am sure we are not the only two are having these issues? Is there any solution yet?
Same here, and my problem is clearwire throttling. It typically loads about 90% then throttles down to dialup speed. At that point, iTunes deletes the download and gives an error. A 200MB podcast with Itunes typically takes about 1.2-2 Gigs of downloading.
iTunes is a good way to FIND podcasts but the VERY WORST WAY ON EARTH to pretend to download them. I accept that now. Go to the url in a browser. download it with save as. Never go back to itunes and care. I have wasted about 100 man hours so far until I wised up.