Loopy Pro: Create music, your way.

What is Loopy Pro?Loopy Pro is a powerful, flexible, and intuitive live looper, sampler, clip launcher and DAW for iPhone and iPad. At its core, it allows you to record and layer sounds in real-time to create complex musical arrangements. But it doesn’t stop there—Loopy Pro offers advanced tools to customize your workflow, build dynamic performance setups, and create a seamless connection between instruments, effects, and external gear.

Use it for live looping, sequencing, arranging, mixing, and much more. Whether you're a live performer, a producer, or just experimenting with sound, Loopy Pro helps you take control of your creative process.

Download on the App Store

Loopy Pro is your all-in-one musical toolkit. Try it for free today.

«1

Comments

  • Might be useful if Apple were to release a list of the infected apps they've deleted, so customers who have them installed already can do the same.

  • @monzo said:
    Might be useful if Apple were to release a list of the infected apps they've deleted, so customers who have them installed already can do the same.

    You would think that, but knowing Apple, it seems that the response is 'what problem'.

  • WIll be interesting to see if they have any failsafe procedures in place for this kind of thing. If they can force feed an unwanted U2 album to everyone without consent, I'm sure they could do the reverse.

  • A cached list, original page unavailable.

    under the English names, there are a couple apps some of us might have picked up - the other ones, it's all Chinese to me...

    Noteworthy: Guitar Master, WinZip, PDFReader, some of cam-related apps.

    http://webcache.googleusercontent.com/search?q=cache:X5-uSbpP5BgJ:researchcenter.paloaltonetworks.com/2015/09/malware-xcodeghost-infects-39-ios-apps-including-wechat-affecting-hundreds-of-millions-of-users/+&cd=1&hl=nl&ct=clnk&gl=nl

  • @Jocphone said:
    If they can force feed an unwanted U2 album to everyone without consent, I'm sure they could do the reverse.

    Force feed everyone into an unwanted U2 album without consent? That'd teach that Bono.

  • Ha ha! I'll bring my paper and comb kazoo.

  • Thanks for the heads up. That's just nasty stuff. Luckily most apps look like the free Chinese ripoff versions that are crap anyways

  • Gotta say, it's a clever hack. And really the only way in to iOS.

    Sadly, I'm not sure there is much point in removing the offending software from people's phones. The damage was done the first time they ran it. Would be good to notify people though. And block traffic to the known servers (that report the personal info).

    Seems like the social hack here was appealing to Chinese developers who have a hell of a time downloading Xcode (3 gb) from Apple servers—someone hosted hacked copies/parts on closer servers promising faster download speeds. That's something Apple could address with 0.000002% of last week's revenue.

  • It is one of the oldest. When UNIX and the C language were being developed the programmers challenged each other to penetrate the security. The winner placed a backdoor into the compiler that was used to create each new iteration of the kernel.

    From the Steven Levy book on the original hackers when the word meant clever not criminal.

  • Affected apps were dl'ed from China's iTunes stores only.

  • @syrupcore said:
    Seems like the social hack here was appealing to Chinese developers who have a hell of a time downloading Xcode (3 gb) from Apple servers—someone hosted hacked copies/parts on closer servers promising faster download speeds. That's something Apple could address with 0.000002% of last week's revenue.

    I used to work for a famous computer corporation, and the new website the web team built for them increased their revenues by a factor of 8x, bringing them in a staggering amount of extra profit. At our annual 'VP talking to the worker ants' meeting, the staff were understandably expecting praise and collective pats on the back, maybe even a bonus. Instead the VP opened with "yes profits have been good this quarter. But think to yourself...the next time I go to the stationary cupboard...do I really need this pencils? - We all need to save money here" - and went into a half hour speech about how we can all contribute to cutting costs by keeping our pencils going longer, even if it means they're harder to hold. No bonus either.

    I'm guessing Apple are pretty much the same - despite massive profits they'll still cut corners that they really oughta shouldn't.

  • Huh, I had all those apps on my devices. And weirdly, the only other apps I had were the ones apple makes one automatically have on a persons device. I'm set. Got everything I need...................... Or do I.....................hmmmm.......

  • CuteCut (nice video editor) also on that list.

    I deleted it, and PDF reader for good measure.

  • /me weeps at the known pain of Monzo's story.

  • There are several "Guitar Master" apps on the App Store but worryingly, the one I have loaded on my iPad (rainbow-like coloured plectrum with GM in the middle) doesn't appear, so I take it this one is affected... I can't remember what it did, probably loaded it once only, but it's now deleted!!

  • Has Apple made a statement yet?

  • Has Apple made a statement about what ?

    Tehe

  • I think Apple would rather not damage their narrative of "Secure Platforms"

  • And to think all the times we have waited for developers to have their apps reviewed only to fail review, if they had Xcodeghost they could have bypassed the troublesome review stage......so the AppStore didn't have a secure list of approved apps?

  • I had Pocket Scanner Cloud. Good thing I never actually used it and had deleted it for being something I’d never use.

  • So the BBC stated this only affected apps in the AppStore in China, is this true, if so why is everybody paranoid, you don't trust the News? Or lack/depth of the News report, or don't trust Apple, or all the above and blame the ET's.

  • edited September 2015

    I'd say clarity is paramount with these types of issues.

    That and reassurance its sorted I guess.

  • @DaveMagoo said:
    I'd say clarity is paramount with these types of issues.

    That and reassurance its sorted I guess.

    I know sadly that's been lacking, a nice clear and definitive statement by Apple.

  • @Martygras said:
    Affected apps were dl'ed from China's iTunes stores only.

    If only someone had mentioned this earlier in this thread... (facepalm) ;)

  • @knewspeak said:
    So the BBC stated this only affected apps in the AppStore in China, is this true, if so why is everybody paranoid, you don't trust the News? Or lack/depth of the News report, or don't trust Apple, or all the above and blame the ET's.

    I'd tend to believe the BBC over me but I'd be interested to understand how that is true. The hack didn't describe anything about country or language specifics.

  • I'd tend to believe the BBC in matters of iOS, not the political issues.

  • @supadom said:
    I'd tend to believe the BBC in matters of iOS, not the political issues.

    +100

  • Only thing with today's rolling news, it's quite superficial in detail and so, so tediously repetitive, 24 hrs News, a lot of hours to fill, even at it's best, a lot of waffle, probably BBC's Click will explain more. As for politics, well that depends on your politics, but as with any modern organisation the BBC is filled with lots of 'well to do, middle class people'. IMO.

Sign In or Register to comment.