![]() Order in Progress - We have all the information needed to complete your order.Though you can’t make changes to your order right now, you’ll be able to when we start preparing your order. Order Placed - We’ve received your order and payment information.On the Your Orders page, an order status message displays above each of your items. There’s more work Apple needs to do here, but the simple functionality Apple ID site encourages me that things are moving in the right direction.It's easy to check the status of your order! First, visit online Order Status and enter your Apple ID and password. It’s funny, but this list isn’t completely comprehensive either: My wife’s laptop, which is authorized with my Apple ID in iTunes, does not show up here. In any event, once I found the Devices list on the Apple ID site, I felt I finally had a handle on my devices–almost. Once I pruned out my old devices, that list started to make sense. ![]() I was always baffled about where that list was coming from and how to remove old devices from it, but it turns out that the Apple ID website is the answer. Two-factor authentication, every time I used Apple’s old two-step authentication system, it prompted me with a list of devices to use for authentication–most of which were old devices I hadn’t logged into in months or even more than a year. From here you can also remove devices from your Apple ID, though they’ll just reappear if they are currently running and logged in. It’s got pictures, specific model numbers, names, whether it’s enrolled in Apple Pay, and–if you click on them–OS versions and serial numbers. This view is a lot friendlier than the one in iTunes. This kind of stinks, but it’s a limitation that’s designed to prevent cycling many devices through different Apple IDs for piracy or fraud purposes. So if you move your child’s iPad to their own Apple ID, you’ll need to hold it for 90 days before selling it to someone else, or they won’t be able to log in to iTunes. May not be perfect, but it’s better than not being able to use a bunch of features on some of your devices.Īnother quirk of this list is that you can only associate a device with a different Apple ID once every 90 days. If you run out of room, one option would be to use Family Sharing to create a second account for some of your devices–and if you’ve got a large family, you’re going to run into this limit in a hurry, so take advantage of that feature. ![]() If you ask me, this number is too low, and Apple needs to get its media partners to open things up a little bit more.Īccording to Apple, a device is added to this screen when you try to download old purchases from the iTunes Store, App Store, iBooks Store, or Mac App Store when you turn on Automatic Downloads or Family Sharing or when you subscribe to iTunes Match. The new limit is 10 devices total, including iOS devices, with a maximum of five of them being computers. This is where the old “five Macs and unlimited iPods” has gone. Coming to this screen and seeing “iPhone (Jason’s iPhone)” listed three times is not helpful.) It also tells you when you associated each device with your Apple ID, which can be helpful in pinpointing which device is which, in case you’re not sure. (This is a good time for me to put in a plug for you to name every device you own something unique. Just click the Manage Devices button and you’ll be presentedįrom the resulting screen, you can see every device that’s been authorized for playing copy-protecting media, with both its type (iPad, iPhone, Mac) and the unique name you gave it. In your account screen in iTunes, you’ll find an iTunes in the Cloud section that allows you to see all the devices you’ve authorized for connection with copy-protected digital media from Apple. ![]() “iTunes in the Cloud” is a weird phrase, one of the many perplexing phrases you’ll find in the complex back corridors of iCloud. Instead, you need to find a list of all your authorized iTunes devices… iTunes in the Cloud ![]() If you want a list of those five computers, though, there isn’t one. ![]()
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