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The file will download to your default download-folder. On MacOS this folder is called Downloads by default. Double-click SpotifyInstaller.zip in order to unpack the actual Spotify installation: Now double-click 'Install Spotify' and the following progress bar should appear: Spotify will launch automatically when the installation is ready.
Swipe in from the right edge of the screen, tap Settings, and then tap Change PC settings. (If you're using a mouse, point to the upper-right corner of the screen, move the mouse pointer down, click Settings, and then click Change PC settings.) 2. Under PC settings, tap or click General. 3.
Here are the instructions: Go to the Control Panel. Click Programs and Features. Select Spotify in the list and click uninstall. Follow the instructions on the screen. On the Start search bar, type %AppData% and hit enter. This should open up the folder: C:\Users\*Username*\AppData\Roaming.
The Miniplayer is only available for Premium users just now. To use the Miniplayer, look for this icon on your desktop app: You can find it at the bottom right corner between the volume and the full screen buttons. Miniplayer icon in-app. I hope you have the same handy experience with the Miniplayer as I did.
2018-03-23 04:26 PM. Hey, @lukevo -. On Spotify, go to Settings > Show Advanced Settings > Offline Songs Storage and there you would be able to check the location where your songs get downloaded. Thank you 🙂. View solution in original post. Reply.
2020-12-24 02:48 PM. Spotify with Window 10 freezes very, very often. Mostly when changing a song. The only "solution" is to kill the Spotify instances (there a several) with the task manager and then to restart Spotify - until it freezes again. Spotify can hardly be used with Windows 10 anymore.
2023-05-17 08:16 AM. Not the solution, or at least not the practical solution. Google older versions of Spotify for PC. Go the webpage you find, pick a version from a few months back, install. Now how long it will be until Spotify update it back to this version I don't know, but this at least works for now.
So, what I did was: * Uninstall from the Start Menu (search for Spotify, click Uninstall) * Go to Add or remove programs in the Settings, search for Spotify (yep, still there) * Select Move and move it to a different drive (if you have an empty USB drive, use it). Windows will create 3 folders. Delete them.
In the Desktop app, go to Spotify Settings > Show Advanced Settings > Startup and Window Behavior. Select 'No' in the dropdown menu. Restart the computer, and then try with the reinstall again. If you still run into the same issue, go to Task Manager and select the 'More Details' dropdown button. Scroll down to the 'Background Processes' and ...
Attached is a screen capture for the compatibility mode. If it disapears : - right click the Spotify icon and select Properties - Select the Compatibility tab - Click the "Run this program in compatibility mode for:" and select Windows XP (Service pack3) Good luck. View solution in original post.