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Comments
sounds good so far, you might try recording a 4 bar clip from a 120 bpm stream of 16th note snare hits and comparing the recorded hits with the grid. my results are pretty dismal but lots of opportunity for user error... i am also interested in an ica4 but would need to test drive one first and they are not sold locally here
A what?
An IAC Bus is the OS X MIDI Bus. In Audio/MIDI Set up click Window --> Show MIDI Window - Then Click the IAC Driver Bus Icon - then Click Device is Online. This enables virtual MIDI ports for Inter-Application routing. The IAC Bus is effectively the Host - your iPAD then can join the Network Session, and receive MIDI from the IAC Bus. In this way, individual Apps can receive MIDI from Wherever it comes from on OS X (Daws / Plugins etc). Within Daws you can typically send MIDI out to the IAC Driver Bus (once you've enabled it in your Daw, I use Live, but more often Hosting Au) - then MIDI from OS X Can be received by iOS (or OSX) apps via the Network Session (MIDI In on the App). You can create Multiple Network Sessions if you need multiple channels or more complex busses.
simply establishing the studimux link will bridge the 2 midi environments. no need for networking or iac.
Yes. That is what confused me. MIDI is working fine.
The aggregate device thing is for audio. It is for combining audio interfaces. I was hoping it would allow me to assign Studiomux to an audio track, thereby eliminating the need for aux track routing when I need to record the Studiomux track. The way it is now, I have to have Studiomux assigned to an instrument track, which then goes to an aux track, then an audio track; was hoping aggregate device might mean one less track. But I'm working fine without it. Would just offer a simpler workflow, possibly.
Anyway, none of this has anything to do with MIDI.
Similarly, with IAC there's no need for any connection tools between ios and mac for audio or midi. I had a similar problem with my ipad not being recognized by the audio midi setup, so I relayed what finally worked for me, along with remembering to always disconnect from audio/midi setup, rather than pulling the plug - which definitely can cause re-connection issues. Good luck!
Interesting. Thanks. I didn't realize there was any way to disconnect from within AMS. I always "eject" external drives or disks using the Finder before unplugging them, but I have definitely never disconnected the iPad in any way other than by simply pulling the plug.