Most S60 devices have built-in music playback capabilities and double as a portable music player for MP3 and AAC tracks. The music player speaks ID3 and allows you to navigate your music library by artist, album, genre etc.:

There are a couple of ways to transfer music from your Mac to the S60 device. The simplest one (but also the most primitive) is to simply drag the songs either within from Finder or iTunes on your Mac to the memory card of your phone. As the files can be rather large, I find a non-Bluetooth mechanism fastest. Once again, there are a couple of options: either use an external card reader to directly write to the memory card of your phone or use the phone as a USB mass storage device directly. The USB mass storage mechanism is a little slower but works fast enough for my purposes, and avoids the hassle of pulling the memory card out and playing with an external reader.
Once the music files themselves have been moved, you need to launch Music Player on your phone and select Options > Refresh Music library... to update the song index. This will take a few moments, depending on the number tracks on your phone.
Nokia also provides a piece of software called Nokia Music Manager for Mac which I am yet to take for a spin. The page indicates that the application is for the N91 multimedia computer, so I need to test whether it works as specified with other S60 devices.
Another option is to have a look at the rather excellent SyncTunes software at http://www.nesfield.co.uk/synctunes/ (free/donationware). SyncTunes provides a straightforward mechanism for synchronising a given iTunes playlist with any external disk volume, and using either a card reader or the USB mass storage functionality achieves exactly this.
SyncTunes has a great deal of customisable options, but has reasonable defaults at least for my purposes. When you fire up SyncTunes for the first time, you need to select the iTunes playlist and the external volume (your memory card) to synchronise with. Here is an example of my settings:

Once the playlist and the target volume and folder (I use Music) have been selected, all it takes to sync the tunes is to click Sync. SyncTunes also remembers the settings from one session to another, and allows you to define profiles for multiple different sync operations (e.g. for different phones).
Once SyncTunes has been set up, all it really takes to have your iTunes and your phone tunes synchronised is to take the following steps:
The above operation is smooth enough that I've actually started shying away from dragging my trusty old iPod mini along anymore, as the phone is with me 100% of the time anyhow, and usually with a headset. The mini is finding still some use in occasions where the larger capacity is needed (e.g. longer travel), but I actually find myself listening more music and more often now that I do not have to worry about keeping 2 separate devices synchronised and charged at all times. But as always, your mileage will vary.
Also note that music bought from the iTunes Store will not play on anything else than an iPod until Apple makes non-DRM tracks available (any day now, basically, for the EMI catalogue at least).
Comments
Salling Software has
Salling Software has released Salling Media Sync for Mac and Windows. It supports several Nokia and Sony Ericsson phones, and also some Sony portable players. http://www.salling.com/MediaSync/mac/
It allows to synchronize playlists and podcasts from iTunes, and also allows you to get media files from phone to your computer.
It seems to work fine, worth of trying.
SyncTunes: m3u playlists don't work properly
I tried SyncTunes with my N95 and was very pleased: Setup and features are very well done!
I only have a problem with the playlists: My N95 won't accept them. Together with Paul Nesfield (the developer), I found out that the Problem is the naming of the files: The N95 want's the volume name ('E:') at the beginning of each file path in the list. Paul is busy working at a script or any other solution for I can't do it myself due to lack of perl scripting skills. Hopefully he succeeds, that's what my wife hopes. Because if playlist syncing with the N95 works properly, I'll give my iPod nano to her as a present. :-)
Regards,
:-) Dirk
Hi, Dirk, do you know if
Hi,
Dirk, do you know if Paul has had any success in making SyncTunes convert iTunes Playlists to the required format for the N95? I'd really like to know!
Cheers,
Naomi
Very timely article. I've
Very timely article. I've also just started moving from carrying my iPod and a phone to just the N95. I tried Nokia Music Manager and have to agree with the previous post it is slow and the end results resulted in many errors. (Using my 2.0 Core Duo MacBook w/2Gb RAM) I also use and love SyncTunes its elegant and fast. However, I have not yet found the perfect settings to transfer the playlist file (.M3U) that the N95 could properly read. It sees the playlist but results in an error.
SyncTunes works great. I use
SyncTunes works great. I use it all the time to transfer music to my E61.
SyncTunes bug
I think I may have found a small glitch with SyncTunes last night -- I was trying to sync some tracks and I found that a particular Dropkick Murphys album was not being transferred, with no indication why.
Turns out that the system path to the tracks contained an apostrophe (´). When I replaced the character in the path with a single quote (') the tracks started syncing right away.
Nokia Music Manager
OK, I took the Nokia Music Manager for Mac for a test ride on my MacBook, but the results were a little discouraging. First of all, the application is slightly old and still PPC, which means that it will be run under Rosetta with Intel Macs. But worst of all, I cannot get it to work - it hangs after startup and tells me that it's Loading Media Lists.
The application is intended for the N91, and I was using it with N95, which may explain the odd behaviour. In the mean time, SyncTunes provides a nice stop-gap solution.
I took a look inside the NMM
I took a look inside the NMM Installer package, and it seems that there is a kernel extension (.kext - a driver, basically) as well as the NMM application itself.
This kext is also PowerPC only, and unlike normal applications, kexts have to have Intel code to be able to run on Intel - Rosetta can't help here unfortunately.
Sam