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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.

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Midiflow Sale

On sale for £2.99
Midiflow – MIDI router/processor/sync clock by Johannes Doerr
https://appsto.re/gb/IiNC0.i

Comments

  • Thanks for the heads up! I never grabbed it but it's always been tempting. Will take the plunge today.

  • i already have midibridge but always found the interface confusing.I assume this here is the better choice (besides the midi clock)?

  • I couldn't get it to work with egoist which was the only thing I wanted it for. Midi is just so flakey on ios these sorts of things always feel like experimental dice rolls.

  • will this work as an all-in-one MIDI filtering and routing? how does it compare to the other options out there?

  • I just bought it, but from the recent discussions here, it depends on how well midi is written into the synth or drum app you want to control. this really is the best option from what I have read.

  • I wholeheartedly recommend Midiflow and can't wait to see what features get added next. Remember, if it isn't working now for one of your apps, it will probably be supported soon, or the app's developer just doesn't care about our workflows.

    It is up to the developers to correctly implement midi, but there are so many facets to it they have to pick and choose which part of midi they wish to support or go all out and do it correctly from the start. This is one of the things I look for when looking into buying an app.

    Auria seems to have all their ducks in a row as they allow MTC, MMC, Clock, SPP, notes & even Mackie control surface protocols for HUI & MCU, and they are actually implemented correctly. Now it's up to everybody else to fix their implementation. Animoog and some others are already there with some form of midi control or are even controllers themselves.

  • Are the IAP's on sale? They are currently £2.29 and £3.99 (I'm not sure if these are the normal price). I'd probably use controller remapping, so may buy both especially if they're at a reduced price.

  • I knew it was buyer beware big time and not actually Midiflows fault that I could not use it. Thus I didn't ask for a refund.

    I was just surprised that Sugar Bytes who made Thesys which has been great for midi screwed the pooch on the Egoist midi implementation.

    @Martygras said:
    I wholeheartedly recommend Midiflow and can't wait to see what features get added next. Remember, if it isn't working now for one of your apps, it will probably be supported soon, or the app's developer just doesn't care about our workflows.

  • edited October 2015

    I'm not sure if this will help anyone else, but I needed to do a little tweaking to get Midiflow to replace FreEWI, routing MIDI into GarageBand.

    I wanted to route Jam Maestro MIDI Out to GarageBand MIDI In. To do so using Midiflow, you need to create a virtual input (at the bottom of the sources list), naming it (eg) 'Midiflow'. In Jam Maestro MIDI out, you need to connect to that MIDI port, and make sure you enable Background audio in the general MIDI options.

    Back in Midiflow, you need to create a virtual output, naming it (eg) 'GarageBand'.

    The final Midiflow routing connects these two virtual ports together, then you can add Midiflow processing along the way - remapping velocities, or transposing the notes up an octave to avoid the guitar strums at the bottom of the GarageBand range, or any of the other transformations that Midiflow offers.

  • edited October 2015

    Looks a lot more user friendly compared to MidiBridge and creating virtual midi ports sounds usefull.The only thing i understand from MidiBridge is how to connect some apps and use the network session for the midi clock and syncing tempos,but it works.Is it possible to create midi ports on every app that supports midi ?

  • I have found it to just be a prettier version of MidiBridge.
    If you are confused by MIDIBridge's interface, perhaps you could try this. Personally, since I already used MB, I deleted MIDIFlow off my devices. Nothing to really knock it, and in some GUI aspects it's better, but if you have the one, I don't think this is all that much of a technical improvement.

  • @boberto said:
    I have found it to just be a prettier version of MidiBridge.
    If you are confused by MIDIBridge's interface, perhaps you could try this. Personally, since I already used MB, I deleted MIDIFlow off my devices. Nothing to really knock it, and in some GUI aspects it's better, but if you have the one, I don't think this is all that much of a technical improvement.

    I think "prettier" is selling it short. They are indeed similar in features but MF just does it all better, in my opinion. Not just prettier—cleaner and easier to use, partially as a result of attention to design. Plus MIDI clock generation, custom virtual ports, custom scales for note remapping, basic event monitoring, controller conditions....

    To me, unless you really need the (magnificent) StreamByter, there's not much of a contest.

    http://www.midiflow.com/documentation/
    http://www.audeonic.com/mb_manual/

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