You can set your iPod nano’s clock-like interface by it: When Apple ships a major update to iOS, you can bet that an updated version of iTunes is also on the menu. Such is the case with iOS 5 and its companion, iTunes 10.5. (As is Apple’s custom, you need the latest version of iTunes to use a new iOS update.)
The basic features of iTunes 10 () haven’t changed at all. Media is organized just as it was before, iTunes contains the same hodgepodge of media tools and features, and Ping remains a weak social networking effort. Rather, what’s most exciting about iTunes 10.5 is that—thanks to iCloud and wireless syncing of iOS devices—you should have to sit down in front of the application far less frequently. Read the full review from Macworld here


