By Lee Hutchinson, Ars Technica – December 26, 2012 at 08:45AM
iTunes is something a whole lot of folks tolerate. It’s never been the best at any particular thing (except perhaps activating and syncing your iPhone or iPad, where it’s the only official game in town), but it certainly does a lot of stuff. Sometimes slow, sometimes crashy, and perpetually gaining features, it’s the app we use every day but rarely with any joy. One of its more frustrating aspects is its lack of an officially supported server component—Apple seems stubbornly unwilling to provide a real iTunes server, and so folks who would otherwise happily centrally locate a media library on a perfectly suitable NAS are stuck with islands of music.
Building a central multi-user iTunes server that works consistently and well— that’s also easy to configure and maintain without needing remote administration tools or command line hackery—is annoyingly difficult. However, it is relatively easy to take your iTunes library and simply move it to a NAS. It’s not the house iTunes server we wish we had, but it does get your data off of your computer’s local hard disk drive.
Why would you want to do this? The reason that pushed me down this path is solid state disks. As iTunes libraries go, mine’s middle of the road—about 50GB, made up of a mixture of music, audiobooks, and iOS apps but lacking movies, TV, and podcasts. Still, that’s 50GB of SSD space that would be taken up by files which, frankly, don’t particularly benefit from being on an SSD. I could relocate them to an external drive, but I don’t have any spare external drives with enough capacity. What I do have, though, is a Synology DS-412+ with plenty of space on it.