Running Logic 9 + Leopard from External FW 400 drive: good idea?

Hi All,
I'd like to take the plunge to Logic 9 and figured I'd set up a dedicated external hard drive with just the system and Logic on it. This is for a G5 Quad running 10.5.8.
The idea would be the hard drive and system install would remain "pure" for Logic.
However, the drive would be attached via Firewire 400 rather than internal SATA.
Does the drawback of an external drive over firewire 400 running both the system and Logic outweigh the benefit of booting from a dedicated Logic drive?
(Want to get started on Logic 9 but don't want to put too much money into my G5 since I'd rather put any new computer money towards a new, intel machine).
Just a thought.
Thanks for any advice.

I understand you don't want to spend money on your G5, but maybe consider buying a new drive and partitioning it so that it's a dual boot system - Logic 9 on one, everything else on the other, which you've cloned from your existing drive. That leaves your other internal bay for an audio drive.
HDs are so cheap these days - I just bought some 1TB Barracudas for under $100 each, and it won't be wasted - you can plop it into your new machine when you get it.

Similar Messages

  • Is it possible to install leopard from external USB DVD drive?

    Hi all,
    I've read through the various posts on the subject and there doesn�t seem to be a definitive answer on this. I've got a Lacie USB2 DL DVD drive which I'm trying to use to install leopard on an earlier MacBook Pro (core duo 2.0ghz). I've tried the various suggestions (hold c on boot, hold option key on boot, set dvd as startup drive), and so far been unsuccessful. The drive is just not recognized.
    The DVD media is fine(I've got family edition of Leopard), I've successfully installed it on my G5. The Lacie drive recognizes it fine, when I'm in tiger on MBP and insert the disk it is mounted as I would expect. I did try dbl-clicking the install icon as well (in case you were wondering)
    So, does anyone have any other ideas for me to try, or should I go and get a refund on the Lacie drive? The guys in the store (Apple authorized reseller, not Apple Store) assured me it would work, so I don't want to look like a clown if it is possible and I'm just doing it wrong
    Anyway, thanks in advance for any replies.

    Hi,
    Thanks for the reply. Yes the MBP is currently running Tiger, I want to flatten this with a fresh install of Leopard. I can view the install DVD when in Tiger currently.
    I haven't tried what you have suggested, but I have seen various posts suggesting this approach. I've also seen several posts explain how to create a partition on an external firewire Harddrive and this seems to have worked for various people.
    This would however mean that I didn't really need the external Lacie drive at all, as I've got access to my G5s DVD drive over the network. The more I search on this, the more convinced I am the USB drive was a bad idea.
    Once again thank for the response.

  • Does run Mac OS X from external disk will damage Win7 installed at internal disk?

    Hi,
    When I buy a Mac Mini Server 2011, I replace the Mac OS X Lion bootable disk with a SSD and install Win7 64, the other internal disk is also used by windows.
    Now I need write some code in Mac OS using XCode, I assembling the Mac OS X Lion bootable disk with a USB disk shell and plug in Mac Mini's USB port, when I power on the machine and press the ALT key, the firmware show the Max OS disk, but I stoped.
    I want to know if I boot into Mac OS, will it damage the Win7 disk? Can I apply OS patch or upgrade firmware?
    Thanks in advance!

    Does run Mac OS X from external disk will damage Win7 installed at internal disk?
    Of course not.  Why would it?

  • Satellite L20-100 can be booted from external USB hard drive?

    I recently bought Toshiba Satellite L20-100 and I wonder if:
    1. is there any possibility to boot this machine from external usb hard drive?
    2. it is possible to attach another internal hard drive?
    Supposing that the both answers above are 'no', how can I solve the following problem: I need hdd space, I need to boot 3 separate Wxp Operating Systems onto the same machine (Toshiba Satellite L20-100).

    Booting from external USB HD - "No" would be the official, mcrsoft sponsored, answer. However, it is possible. Not easy but it can be done. I've seen it done with my own eyes and there are guides how to do this. Just look for it with search engine. But if you have enough disk space you better do what was suggested here - create 3 partitions and use boot manager.

  • Running Snow Leopard from External Hard Drive

    I have some teacher software that lion won't run.  It was suggested to me to run snow leopard from an external hard drive.  I have an external WD hardrive for mac.  Can someone share with me on how to do it?
    Thanks!

    Have a look here
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT1948

  • Cannot boot Snow Leopard from external FireWire drive

    I use a Western Digital My Passport Studio 500 GB external drive to back up my MacBook Pro with Time Machine. I had created a 30 GB Leopard boot partition with various utilities and tools; since the small drive goes wherever the laptop goes, I figured it might come in handy to be able to boot the computer in the event something went wrong with its internal 250 GB drive.
    Over the weekend, I upgraded the external drive to Snow Leopard, and now it can no longer be used to boot the laptop. The symptoms are truly weird. Holding down the Option key while rebooting does not show the external drive unless I disconnect and reconnect the FireWire cable. The drive then shows up. I select it, and it appears to begin to boot, then it just sits on the gray screen with the little round thingie turning for a long time (five to ten minutes). Eventually, the system boots from its internal drive. This happens regardless of whether I'm connected by means of FireWire 400 or 800.
    After spending a lot of time looking at the usual suspects (cables, permissions, PRAM, etc.) I reinstalled Sand Leopard (OK, 10.5) and lo and behold, the drive boots again (though for some reason I still have to go through the disconnect/reconnect routine). Clearly, something in the OS has changed with respect to the way booting from external drives is handled.
    On the positive side, I have none of the symptoms described in other threads: Time Machine works flawlessly, and both the boot partition and the Time Machine partition appear on the Snow Leopard desktop every time I connect the drive.
    Does anyone have the same issues? Does anyone know of a workaround?
    Thanks,
    Daniel

    Hi,
    Working from a MacBook Pro 2.4 (Santa Rosa) with 4gb ram, running OS 10.5.7-
    (All external HDs are 7200 rpm)
    Shortly after our fresh install of Snow Leopard onto a new but already tested External 1.5 Seagate Barracuda (with the most current firmware), in an OWC Mercury Elite enclosure-
    We installed Snow Leopard smoothly to that external HD without any issues, and it booted up from that 1.5T external HD, and worked fine.
    Then, still working from the MacBook Pro, I turned on and booted another external HD (a Newertech Guardian Maximus RAID running 10.4.11 via FW800, daisy chained to the 1.5T External with Snow Leopard newly installed.
    Again that's MacBook Pro <FW800> Snowy external HD <FW800> 10.4.11 RAID (booted & working from the RAID).
    But when I tried to bootup up Snow Leopard, after doing the work on the 10.4.11 RAID-
    It would not boot up.
    Though Snowy would appear as an available Start Up disk, each time it was selected as the Boot drive,
    the Internal HD OS 10.5.7 booted instead.
    I changed around the cables and tried repeatedly.
    Same result, no Snowy boot.
    Even after the OS 10.4.11 external RAID was power down, and disconnected.
    After some looking around, I found this forum:
    http://discussions.apple.com/thread.jspa?threadID=2136208&tstart=0
    Got me thinking.
    I tried the USB, and it booted !
    I tried the FW400, and it booted !
    And mysteriously, at this point- I tried the FW800, and it booted !
    And then, the MBP boots seemed to reliably boot from that external, via FW800.
    Bizarre.
    Snow Cat needs to be taught originally how to find FW800 from the bottom up ?
    Turns out, Snow Leopard doesn't like booting,
    if the preceding boot was on the 10.4.11 RAID, and work was done with programs there.
    So, once again, I repeated this process:
    After working with programs on the 10.4.11 external HD,
    the MBP would not boot the Snow Leopard external HD,
    it defaulted to booting from the MBP internal HD OS 10.5 via FW800.
    even though Snowy was selected for Start Up.
    This was the case repeatedly.
    (It would also boot from the 10.4.11 external RAID, if it were selected for Start Up.)
    (In each of these tests below, I only rebooted the computer at each test. I did no work with programs on the various HDs.)
    SO, once again, at this point of the process:
    I plugged in that Snowy external HD via FW400,
    and it booted up fine !
    Then I booted up from the Internal 10.5, and tried to boot Snowy via FW800 again.
    It worked !
    Then I turned on the 10.4.11 RAID external HD, and tried to reboot from the Snowy external HD.
    It worked too !
    Then I booted from the 10.4.11 RAID, it came up fine.
    Then booted from the Snowy, it came up fine.
    Then booted from the Internal HD 10.5, it came up fine.
    Then booted from Snowy again, it came up fine.
    Then I turned off the 10.4.11 HD, booted from Snowy, it came up fine.
    Then booted from the Internal, it came up fine.
    Then tried Snowy one last time, it came up fine.
    Anyway, the issue is:
    It works fine-
    Except when I do work within the programs on the 10.4.11 external RAID.
    Then I have to use FW400 or USB to get it to boot once again . . .
    Regardless of whether the other external HD is removed from the system.
    It's some sort of flaw, and totally repeatable in testing.
    Hopefully, it will be fixed soon.
    Howard

  • Yosemite on internal HD and boot Snow Leopard from external HD clone

    Hey Everyone,
    I recently cloned my Snow Leopard 10.6.8 internal HD to an external FW800 HD which I can boot off. I have backup of everything, both Time Machine and straight backups.
    I am thinking of upgrading to Yosemite and am wondering will I still be able to boot into Snow Leopard from the Clone?
    I had heard somewhere that Yosemite makes some changes to the logic board which makes it troublesome but I am not up to scratch on this stuff.
    My System is an iMac 2011, identifier 12,1 with 2.5GHz i5 and 4Gb Ram(soon to be upgraded to 16Gb)
    Many thanks in advance
    J

    Hello. I have a similar question. I recently purchased a new iMac (21.5-inch, Late 2013, 3.1 GHz Intel Core i7, 16 GB 1600 MHz DDR3) running OS X 10.10.2 Yosemite.
    My issue: I have an external drive that I partitioned into two partitions, one is for all my music, pictures and videos. The other partition drive is Snow Leopard 10.6.3.
    On my old iMAc (still set up and using it) which is a 2007 machine and running Mt. Lion, I was able to select which drive to start from, between Snow Leopard and Mt. Lion.
    This allowed me to keep playing Sid Meier's Civilization III (the last version where you can build a palace).
    Anyway, on the new iMac, when I choose the Snow Leopard disk as startup, and it reboots, I get a gray screen with the apple on it, and nothing happens.
    Is there something else I need to do? Any idea why this does not work as easily as it did on the old machine?
    Thanks.

  • Can't boot snow leopard from external drive

    I have a copy of snow leopard installed on a separate usb hard drive which I use to run some PowerPC programmes under rosetta. I can attach this USB drive to my Mac Pro and also to an Intel Macbook and choose to start up on this external drive without any issues. However when I try restarting my new 2011 iMac on this external usb drive the machine crashes every time with a kernal panic. Is this problem unique to me or does everyone else have this issue with new iMacs. Mine is a 27" 3.4ghz i& with 12ghb ram installed running 10.72. Is their soemthing I can do to resolve this problem?

    I have now solved the problem of being able to boot from either Snow Leopard or Lion on a new Mid 2011 iMac. This is how I did it.
    1. Attach an external USB drive to an earlier Mac or borrow one from a friend. In my case I used my 2009 Unibody Macbook (which has Lion installed on it but does allow you to install Snow Leopard on an attached device) Put the Snow Leopard install disc in this machine and tell it to install Snow Leopard on your attached USB Drive.
    2. Start up the Macbook (or whatever machine you are using) and get it to restart on the attached USB drive so that it boots up in Snow Leopard. Then when Snow Leopard is up and running on the attached external drive, do a software update to bring it up to 10.68 (the current version). This step is important as I found that if I plugged in the external USB drive into the iMac with only operating system 10.6 installed it would cause a kernal panic on start up when I choose to start up on the external USB drive.
    3. With Snow Leopard updated to system 10.68 you can now plug it into your iMac and restart the iMac booting into Snow Leopard from the external USB drive. You do this by either going to System Preferences>Startup disk and choosing the external drive, or by holding down the option key when you restart your Mac and choosing the external USB drive.
    4. The next step is to make your iMac dual boot now that you know it can run Snow Leopard successfully from an external USB drive. To do this, go into Utilities>Disk Utility and select your main drive. Select the main disk (with Lion on it)  and then choose Partition and choose 2 Partitions. Drag the first partition bundary line down to make the second partition size as small as possible. In my case I had a stock 1TB drive and the smallest partition size it would allow me was 70gb. Create the second partition (assuming you have spare space on your drive to allow this to happen). This will then create a second hard drive icon on your desktop. I renamed mine "Snow Leopard startup".
    5. Download the free (and excellent) utility Carbon Copy Cloner and use it to copy your Snow Leopard operating sytem from your attached USB external drive to your new partition.
    6. That's it! Now you can choose to start up your iMac from either Lion or Snow Leopard using either method mentioned in 3 above.
    7. As a final step I suggest your install your Rosetta only programmes in your new Snow Leopard partition so that you can access them easily and keep them all together.

  • How do I boot Leopard from external hard drive?

    I'm currently staring off into space... my 3 month old MBP seems to have finished its painfully long boot and all that appears the Leopard background. The local Mac guru isn't available until Monday but did tell me I need to boot from my external hard drive. Um, how do I boot from external hard drive?
    The cause of the problem: inserting flash drive powering up.
    Tried safe boot. Only difference was iCal reminder popped up in space.
    Mac guru told me do NOT use install disks!
    Help!
    AR

    Apple support has told me that you cannot boot a MBP from an external drive when Leopard is installed on a MBP.
    That is just plain wrong.
    1) Hook up your external drive. Use FireWire for better performance.
    2) Launch Disk Utility and highlight the actual drive icon at the left. Click on the Partition tab.
    3) In the Partition section, click on the Options button. Click on the radio button for "GUID Partition Map". This is the option you must use in order for a drive to be bootable on an Intel based Mac. Click OK.
    4) Set up your partitions however you want and click the Partition button at the lower right.
    From here, you can either clone your internal drive to the external, or install Leopard on it from scratch.

  • Help installing leopard from external fw dvd

    I'm trying to install Leopard on an iMacCore Duo with a broken dvd drive. The hdd has been wiped clean. I've got an external LaCie fw dvd drive hooked up to the iMac. No matter what i do the iMac still gives me the folder with the ?. Holding down the option or C key with the Leopard dvd in the external drive makes no difference. It won't load the dvd. I've also tried using the dvds that came with the iMac. No luck. Not sure how to put OSX on this iMac.
    thx
    lenn

    Have you tried using your installer disc on another Mac just to be sure there isn't a problem with the DVD? I would also contact LaCie tech support. I would be surprised if the device was not bootable. Do you know if the drive is even working? That is are you able to mount the DVD on the Desktop (assuming you can get to the Desktop.)
    You should be able to boot the computer from an external FW hard drive if you have a bootable system on the drive that's compatible with your iMac. You also may be able to install OS X on the iMac from another Mac with a FireWire port by using Target Disk Mode.
    BTW, you aren't trying to use the Leopard installer discs that came with your MBP to install Leopard on your iMac, are you? If so that won't work. The MB{P's discs are machine specific and will not likely boot the older iMac.

  • Install snow leopard from external hard drive-terminal problems!

    hi everybody ,
    i have a big problem :s
    wanted to restore and getting "Restore Failure Could not find any scan information... then i've followed some terminal commands..finished restoring and couldn't boot cause i only find Macintosh HD when i use "alt option" when i restart my macbook pro and even if i go to "startup Disk" i can find my partition of the external hard drive but when i click on it nd do retart it's can't boot ...another thing is tht m having a slow start and it's ask for my Password (i've no problem with password it just doesn't ask me to enter it before and i have internet and server failure)
    Due to terminal commands?? :((
    Plz help :s

    "How to install Snow Leopard from an External Hard Drive"
    * Launch Disk Utility
    * Select the External Firewire/USB device that you want to use as the boot drive for the upgrade
    * Click “Partition” from the menu options
    * Select 1 Partition, then click “Options” below the partition scheme
    * Select the top option for “GUID Partition Table” – it MUST be GUID to be bootable!
    * Click OK to create the GUID partition (this will reformat the drive, ie: all data is lost)
    * Next, click the “Restore” tab within Disk Utility
    * Select your newly made Snow Leopard 10.6 Install DVD image and restore this image to the GUID partition you just created OR…
    * Alternatively, you can select the Snow Leopard Install DVD and restore directly from the DVD to the GUID partition
    * After the restoration is complete, your GUID partition will now be bootable by Mac OS X!
    * Reboot the Mac holding down the “Option” key to pull up the boot loader, select the Snow Leopard install drive you just created rather than your default Mac OS hard drive
    * Install Snow Leopard as usual!
    Hope this helps!

  • Snow Leopard on external firewire hard drive keeps crashing/freezing

    I own a 2006 iMac that came with OS X 10.4 Tiger installed and it has always been stable and reliable. Lately I had the need to use some software that only ran on OS X Snow Leopard so I installed an external Firewire (Western Digital) 260GB hard drive and put OS X Snow Leopard on it. For the first few months, everything ran fine, but as the drive slowly filled up (or perhaps with time), my Leopard external drive started giving problems, most commonly, it would lose its Ethernet connection for no reason, or I would get a line of black/multicoloured pixels appearing across my Firefox browser (or something else weird would happen to the display), followed by the rainbow wheel spinning indefinitely... this happened more and more often, when I opened too many applications at the same time, or more than 3-4 tabs in Firefox. Occasionally the screen would "white out" or go completely black. I'd have to physically switch the computer off and on again.
    However, I still have not even used 20% of the hard disk space so its not a matter of the hard drive becoming full...
    The Tiger internal drive is still running 100% fine so it's not a problem with my RAM...
    I've tried verifying/repairing the disk, but it doesn't show any problems. Any ideas about what I should try doing next?
    Thanks in advance for any pointers.
    Message was edited by: artemisworks

    Just so I understand this correctly:
    1. Your internal hard drive is on Tiger?
    2. Your external (a WD) is on Snow Leopard?
    3. Where is the "partition"? Do you have either drive partitioned?
    4. You only have the problems when you are booted from/working on something using the external drive?
    I've seen quite a few posts here regarding problems with external Western Digital drives; it appears that their internal drives are fine, but the externals do not play nice with Macs after a while (maybe the enclosure they use??).
    In any case, if your problems are only when using the Western Digital, I'd say return it if possible, get it replaced, or buy a different brand and use the WD as a not-often-needed extra backup.

  • Cannot boot to Windows disc from external USB DVD drive.

    I have a MacBook Pro 17" Early 2011 8,3. I have tried to use bootcamp to install Windows 7 from a external USB DVD drive. All I get, like many people, is a black screen with a blinking cursor, as if it never makes it to boot. I tried restarting to the OS selection for holding alt, and tried the DVD again, did not work.
    I saw a few posts claiming that this didn't work on some models of Mac because of a EFI problem that would not allow booting from a external USB, which is really stupid because it would seems some models can... And MacBook airs can... Can someone please confirm this for me? Has anyone found a resolution?
    If not, APPLE PLEASE FIX THIS.

    Hi,
    Thanks for the reply. Yes the MBP is currently running Tiger, I want to flatten this with a fresh install of Leopard. I can view the install DVD when in Tiger currently.
    I haven't tried what you have suggested, but I have seen various posts suggesting this approach. I've also seen several posts explain how to create a partition on an external firewire Harddrive and this seems to have worked for various people.
    This would however mean that I didn't really need the external Lacie drive at all, as I've got access to my G5s DVD drive over the network. The more I search on this, the more convinced I am the USB drive was a bad idea.
    Once again thank for the response.

  • How do I get iTunes songs which were downloaded from external back-up drive to play on new computer and is there a way to get my play lists back?

    When I try to play a song from my re-installed iTunes library, I get the error message:  "Song xxx could not be played because original file could not be found.  Would you like to locate it?" > "Locate" or "Cancel."  When I click on "Locate" I can't figure out how to get the song to play from any of the places that were "located."  The path is C:\users\Janet\libraries\music\iTunes
    However, iTunes songs chosen from my library will play in iTunes (current version) when I have the external back-up drive plugged in!  I recently copied my backed-up iTunes library from my external back-up drive to a new computer.
    Most of the songs, but not all, magically appear in Windows Media Player and I can play those just fine. 
    I can see my iTunes library in the newest version of iTunes, recently downloaded to new computer, but can't play songs without connecting to the external back-up drive - so maybe there is something else on that external drive that needs to be on my C: drive? 
    I am using an HP Pavillion Notebook, Windows 7, 64-bit.  My previous computer was Windows Vista.  Before Vista, I had XP. 
    Back when I had XP, I wanted to purchase some songs to download to my computer. Because iTunes had the ability, I used it to create a massive library of songs, most of which were ripped from my CDs.  I don't have an iPod and iTunes worked fine for creating playlists and then burning them to CDs. 
    Also, I'd like to know if there is a way to get back my playlists.
    And another thing - in the older version of iTunes, there was a folder in the lists on the left-hand side of the screen where I could click to see all the songs I had purchased.  I'd like to get that ability back if possible.
    In hindsight, iTunes was probably not the best choice for me to build my music library in a Windows operating system, but it seemed to be the best choice at the time.  I really wish I could convert all the songs to mp3 format.
    I have been working with computers since the days of DOS, black and white screens, and no mice.  The first computer I bought for my own use at home was a Mac and it had "Flying Toasters" as a screensaver.  (I miss that screensaver.)  It did not have a tower and I believe they called it a laptop, even though the thing was as big as a suitcase and probably weighed around 30 pounds.  However, I am by no means a computer expert.  In other words, pretend you're trying to tell your mother how to do what I am asking. =)
    Many thanks in advance to anyone who can help me.

    I copied the iTunes file from the external drive and it's in both places.  I thought all I would need is the iTunes program (which I downloaded to new computer) and my iTunes library file.  There must be something else that's missing.  My iTunes library looks the same on the new computer as it does when I open it on the external drive.  If I click on an iTunes library song from my new computer, it will only play if I have the external drive plugged in.
    My back-up drive is a mess.  I have multiple copies of music, video, photo, and document files and I don't know how that happened. ={  Obviously, I don't know how to back up stuff properly and there are back-up files extending over a 6- to 8-year period.  I think all I did was just drag and drop the main folders from the back-up drive to the same main folders on the C: drive.  Also (and I'm kind of fuzzy on this) Windows used to automatically save music files in a folder within my document files (which makes no sense to me).  As my Jewish friends would say, "Oy Vey!" 

  • Is it possible to run Adobe CC apps from a portable hard drive on multiple computers?

    I work at a  university that is not purchasing the Adobe CC license for it's labs. As far as  I know Adobe will not create a deal that structures the fees in a way that makes it possible the University to buy into the CC platform.
    This puts me a a tough spot as a person who teaches digital media in a University setting.  Teaching legacy software (Adobe CS 5) puts our students at an immediate disadvantage.
    To get around this issue, I have come up with the idea of having students purchase Adobe CC license short term (or longer if they like) as a textbook. However my lab administrators don't think there is a reasonable way to do this.  Right now students would have to log into their User space on the University system, download software each time they came to class.  This would not work for many reasons.
    Is there a way to make  Adobe CC portable, so students can download their own CC software and carry it around with them on a portable hard drive?
    Would a system have to be installed on the portable drive or is there a way to run the software from a hard drive using the system on the computer it is attached to?
    FYI the students and instructors have have no access to the computer systems, ex administrator or / root, level of the computers.  Adding software and/or drivers can take months.  Given time , I can get our IT folks to add a limited amount of structure to the system to make it possible for students to use Adobe CC from a portable hard drive if such a solution exists.
    Thanks for your thoughts on this .
    FYI the labs I need to MAC labs running OS 10.7.X (2.7 GHz Intel Core i5 - 4 GB RAM - 1 TB HDD) -

    THe long answer is no.
    Mylenium

Maybe you are looking for

  • How can I turn off catalog SYNC in Photoshop Organizer 10?

    I am still running version 10.  I would like to change the Organizer setup so it does not think it needs to SYNC with an online backup.  I know I can manually stop the task, but I would like the Organizer to stop trying to perform a sync. Thanks! Ken

  • Split Deliveries by Line Items

    Hello all, We would like to split deliveries that have more than 250 lines on them.  We have tried inserting code in several routines in transaction VOFM - Data Transfer - Deliveries.  We have copied Routines 302 & 500 and inserted code directly in 5

  • Product Key compatibility

    We recently ordered a product key for crystal reports xi. We were told by the sales department that this key would work for crystal reports 8. The key did not work for crystal reports 8. I have tried to contact support and they pointed me to this for

  • Available Reports !?

    Is there any way of knowing all the available reports in a particular module including the Z* reports !? For example i would like to know all the available reports MM !! Regards, Ramesh

  • IPod not playing a song

    Hey, My iPod Nano (2GB Second Generation I think, in Silver), isn't playing this one song I bought from iTunes (Operation Ground And Pound by Dragonforce). It plays fine in iTunes, but when I sync it to my iPod, it's recognised but always skips to th