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Apple iLife '05 (Mac)
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List Price : $79.99
Our Price : from $34.70
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Why I buy this one ?
- Fun-to-use suite of tightly integrated creative tools
- Import, organize, edit, and share digital photos with iPhoto
- iMovie HD quickly turns home video into home cinema
- Create Hollywood-style DVDs with iDVD; iTunes digital jukebox
- Easily perform, record, and create music with GarageBand
Special offer for you..find the cheapest!
jayne_doe85 from CA, United States offers this stuff for:
 | Price : $34.70 Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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What our customer's say!
"Excellent.", If you have a Mac, this is a must have suite...you will never regret it.
"Ordered wrong item", I wanted to order the latest Mac version of iLife. Upon receiving your Email solicitation, I automaticaqlly selected the first iLife item that appeared on Amazon's page. Unfortunately, it was for iLife '05, rather than iLife '06. Since I already had iLife'05, I had to send it back and reorder iLife '06. To Amazon, I recommend you feature the latest version of the product and list the discounted older version thereafter. To us Buyers, i've learned to be more aware and detailed in my ordering. It saves everyone a lot of pain and suffering.
"Solid Program Suite", I got my version of iLife '05 when I purchased my new iBook in September. I am an amateur videographer, and photographer, so iLife was right up my alley.
The first thing I did when I got iLife was import some footage I had shot at First Practice of the Formula One United States Grand Prix. iMovie was a snap to use, I just had to plug in my cameras (a Sony Digital 8 and a Canon MiniDV) and iMovie recognized them instantly. After getting the footage from both cameras onto the computer I was able to add beginning and ending titles to the footage, as well as label each car that passed for later years when I forget who drove for whom. I have since done three more multi-footage projects. I even produced a three episode cooking show using iMovie, just for fun.
iTunes is an awesome product. It was my first taste of iLife when I downloaded the free version shortly after it came out. Since then I have not used anything else for music storage. The nice thing about iTunes is the fact that I can put my tunes in multiple playlists and create "smart playlists" for any situation. Especially nice at Christmas, I just put all my Christmas songs in a smart playlist (it did it automatically, I just told it to put all songs with a Holiday genre in the playlist) and let it run until the first Christmas football game. It can also burn CDs of your playlists, however, it is not able to set a gap between songs individually like Toast can, but for most people that is not a problem.
GarageBand is a program I didn't think I would use at all. I don't have a band nor can I sing very well. But, I composed every song in the three episode cooking show using GarageBand's loops. And I have played around with my Audio-Technica ATR30 microphone and it does a very good job. I have also recorded my father playing the piano and it sounded great. It has some very useful effects like those which might be found in a professional recording studio, and it has some very interesting effects like the effect "telephone lines" which would have very little use, although it is fun to use to simulate a radio call-in show. The only problem I see with GarageBand is the fact that it can't record multiple tracks at once. It can accomodate up to 255 tracks, but it can't record them all at once.
iPhoto is a good photo storage program. It really helps reduce clutter by allowing the user to put photos in "albums" like the playlists in iTunes. The editing features are good enough for casual tweaks, but for more power a editor like Adobe Photoshop is required. Other reviewers have more information, so I won't bore you by repeating what they say.
Finally, to tie it all together there is iDVD. This only works on SupeDrive equipped Macintoshes like my iBook, but my external LightScribe DVD drive claims it can work with iDVD with extra software included with it. I have not tried this, but it might be an option for those who do not have a built-in DVD drive. iDVD has some pre-defined still themes and some pre-defined motion themes, but both are very user customizable by allowing the user to replace the background music, background picture, et cetera. It has a professional feel without screaming, "I am trying to impress you!" The downside of iDVD is the fact that the forward and back buttons are not customizable nor can you move them, and there is a limit of six buttons per menu screen.
All in all this suite of programs is wonderful. It does some minor quirks, but it is still usable. It certainly is not a suite of professional quality programs, but is very good for amateurs and semi-professionals. Believe me you won't be dissapointed.
"Superior!!!", This the best product from Apple , simply easy & Powerful collection of software you will never imagine it , good work Apple.
"Nice little media package", At first I hestitated to upgrade from iLife '04. Like most people, I am only willing to spend the money on upgrades if I can see a notable need, or significant new features. I eventually sprung for it, using my student discount, and I'm glad I did.
The thing I find funny about a lot of the other reviews I see, is that the reviewers think that this is a professional product or at least review it like it is. Why? Nobody, especially not Apple, is claiming it to be so. It is, without a doubt, is an excellent product for its class, which is a suite of media tools for the novice to advanced amateur. I am a professional photographer, and I find myself using iPhoto nearly every day. iPhoto is an excellent image manager. One of the greatest new features is the ability to handle RAW files. Other nice features are the automatic card recognition, downloading, and organizing. The program has nice editing features, they are quick and easy to get to (what I call 'down and dirty'). A very nice feature is the ability to set what happens when you double click on a photo, you can aither go to the editor, open the iPhoto editor in another window, or pick an editing program of your choice- like Photoshop Elements, or my favorite Photoshop CS2, or any other program you may want to use. You also still have the ability to get to iPhoto's editor with a button at the bottom of the screen. IPhoto makes outputting your images super easy, you can email, post on the net, print, make and order books, export files, and set wallpapers and screen savers. I use the program as my main photo organizer, finding it much easier to deal with than Photoshop, or even the Adobe Bridge.
In the military, I am a videograoher, which I guess makes me Pro in that field, and I can say that Apple products far exceed the competition. We use Avid, and it absolutely sucks. It is the most counter-intuitive program, buggy, and chock full of inane error meassages that invarialby pop up on every operation. The answer is Final Cut, a fantastically easy and powerful program. But if you don't need a professional editor, than I can reccommend iMovie and iDVD. On a recent mission, we needed to cut a few DVDs, and the solution was not to use the Dells with the horrendous PC software, but to use my Powerbook and iMovie and iDVD. We banged out a nice product in no time using our finished stories from Avid. So, whereas I would never had bought these products individually, I am sure glad I had them as part of the iLife Suite.
GarageBand is also a very nice little program that I like to play with, music being a great interest of mine, though just for fun. I find GarageBand to be supercool, and all I need and more, and as usual, very easy to use.
One fo the best things about the product is that it is from Apple, running on an Apple operating system, running on an Apple computer, so compatibility is never an issue, and the Apple quality and ease of use runs throughout. Whenever Apple upgrades the OS, it immediately upgrades the iLife program if needed.
I highly recommend this product, either as a first purchase or as an upgrade, you won't be disappointed.
You might need this... iLife '05: The Missing Manual details..
|  Apple iWork '05 (Mac) [Old Version] details..
|  The Macintosh iLife 05: An Interactive Guide to iTunes, iPhoto, iMovie, iDVD, and GarageBand details..
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 Apple iLife '08 details..
|  iPhoto 5: Missing Manual details..
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Read this reviews before You buy...
"Overall, wonderfully useful and better than before, but may be a bit buggy", I purchased iLife '05 to accompany another upgrade I bought for my 2003 Powerbook G4, the Mac operating system 10.4 (Tiger). While it doesn't require Tiger and runs well on Panther (10.3), iLife '05 is important software for most Mac users, and the upgrade is worth it for the new features (HD content in iMovie, notation in Garageband, new themes in iDVD, the speed of iPhoto - which can now keep track of camera videos). But I did discover that there were a few bugs, although it seems Apple is doing their best to remedy them with consistent updates, which are automatically downloaded from Apple if your Apple is online (sometimes over 50MB need to be downloaded).
iMovie HD is less stable with my collection of older DV cameras, and switching between camera import and the clip editing screens frequently caused iMovie HD to crash while my camera was connected. Also, while iMovie HD may be able to recognize widescreen video from some DV cameras, it certainly isn't for all cameras, especially older models. But this really is a gem of a video program and there's nothing easier to use.
The latest version of iTunes continues to be free, but there's no doubt that it's integral to the rest of the software of iLife: iMovie HD, iDVD, and Garageband can all import easily from your iTunes music library, which makes it essential for quickly adding in specific songs (or exporting new ones from Garageband) with your music collection. And the Podcast automation is terrific, and it's easy to browse for new content servers, which opened my eyes to the breadth of podcasters. I believe some people take issue with how Apple expects Podcast MP3's to be tagged on the podcasters website, and hopefully Apple will adopt a more standardized way in the future.
As for iPhoto, even though it doesn't have true RAW file editing support, the editing abilities for your photos are now much more robust (exposure, temperature, tilt, and more), and it seems much more light on its feet (speedier) than previous versions. iDVD is equally nimble and the animated themes keep getting better and better.
On the whole, a necessary progression, and Apple has proven that they will continue to tweak and upgrade its potential. Even with a few little bugs, it's well worth the money!
"Apple comes through again", iLife is superb; my only complaint is that it doesn't include a Version 5 of iTunes, but after installation one can upgrade to 4.9 in the usual Apple way. So far everything works great with Tiger (OS 10.4.2) in my 1 GHz G4 Powerbook with 256 MB DDR SDRAM without snap, crackle, or pop. That amount of RAM is the least I would recommend for Tiger and iLife use, however; otherwise the constant swapping in and out of virtual memory will drive you nuts if it works at all. As it is this amount feels marginal to me and an upgrade is on the way.
"iLife05 worth the price of the upgrade -- though its not a complete pkg", Worth it. Only $70 for 5 wonderful tools. iPhoto is superb. Using iDvd I created some spectacular Photo DVD's. iMovie is good but I use Final Cut Express. GarageBand is one I haven't used much. iTunes I use quite a bit. Very powerful.
To all you Windows/Linux users I have this to say -- Hahaha.
"apple ilife", I found that as usual with new software, you gain some and lose some. I purchased ilife so I could export edited music from imovie and use it elsewhere. It took a few days to figure it out but it does work. I am enjoying a few other perks of ilife as well. It will print jewel case covers for you cd's with ease. Overall I am very happy.
"Don't buy unless you have a G4 or G5 system!", I'm sure this is a nice suite of programs from Apple. I love my Mac but cannot install the full program on my (now) puny 400 MHz G3 iMac - the slowest system it can work on. It requires 4.67GB on your startup disk. That's half of my almost full harddrive! And the installer won't allow it to be installed on an external drive. I've got lots of space there! Must be on startup disk. Dang.... GarageBand also doesn't work on a G3 system like mine. iPhoto 5 on a G3 system leaves off the advanced editing tools. So, be very careful about ordering this. Read the fine print about system requirements. I am very disappointed. Oh well, it's almost time to buy that G5 iMac with the 20" lcd.
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