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.

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Memory Refresh App

Guys anyone recommend one that actually works? Preferably free. Thanks!

Comments

  • Close all apps, then hold down the power button until you see the power-off slider, but don't slide it. Next hold down the home button until you return to the home screen. This is the only method I would trust personally.

  • @wim said:
    Close all apps, then hold down the power button until you see the power-off slider, but don't slide it. Next hold down the home button until you return to the home screen. This is the only method I would trust personally.

    yup

  • Check it out "Memory & Disk scanner pro".

  • Now if there was similarly 'simple' way to delete app caches I'd be more than happy :)

    I really don't like the 'delete and re-install' procedure and I don't trust that iOS to 'deletes' all the files that are tagged purgeable when space is running out as it only deletes what is needed to make enough room. (ie. I've had no issues installing 'big' apps when I have like few hundred MBs free, so apparently the 'auto cleaning' somehow works?!).

    But still I'd love to have a way to 'purge' the caches built-in into iOS when I know I will be doing some storage-intesive work without installing additional apps...

  • @Samu said:
    Now if there was similarly 'simple' way to delete app caches I'd be more than happy :)

    I really don't like the 'delete and re-install' procedure and I don't trust that iOS to 'deletes' all the files that are tagged purgeable when space is running out as it only deletes what is needed to make enough room. (ie. I've had no issues installing 'big' apps when I have like few hundred MBs free, so apparently the 'auto cleaning' somehow works?!).

    But still I'd love to have a way to 'purge' the caches built-in into iOS when I know I will be doing some storage-intesive work without installing additional apps...

    No way I'd trust anything for that provided by anyone other than Apple. Even if a third party developer managed to break out of Apple's sandboxing (which I don't believe is possible, and if it was would never be blessed by Apple), I wouldn't trust it to delete only what it should.

  • edited December 2016

    @wim said:

    No way I'd trust anything for that provided by anyone other than Apple. Even if a third party developer managed to break out of Apple's sandboxing (which I don't believe is possible, and if it was would never be blessed by Apple), I wouldn't trust it to delete only what it should.

    I agree here...

    It's so sad when 'big' companies especially those involved in 'social media' have sub-par apps that can fill just about any devices with 'junk'.

    I mean seriously, Facebook and It's Messenger caching 3GBs of files c'mon! And only way to remove it is to delete and re-install the apps. Same with Instagram just looking at news-feeds and whoops 2GB's there... (Yepp, cleaned up ~5GB of space by deleting and re-installing 3 apps).

    There is no use in trying to make Facebook or Instagram add a 'delete cache' feature to their apps since the response is 'It should be handled by the OS!' (That was the reply I got).

    Everyone who's been around knows that a disk looses performance when it's getting full, so Apples 'strategy' to only clean-up when storage is almost full is plain insanity from a performance perspective.

  • wimwim
    edited December 2016

    You made one BIG mistake ... the part about re-installing those apps.

  • @wim said:
    Close all apps, then hold down the power button until you see the power-off slider, but don't slide it. Next hold down the home button until you return to the home screen. This is the only method I would trust personally.

    I didn't realize you could skip the powering down and back up part. Thanks very much for this!

  • @wim said:
    You made one BIG mistake ... the part about re-installing those apps.

    Can't upload images to Instagram without the app and the other apps are used to keep in touch with my friends across the globe.

    I think the 'major' issue here is that /Library/Caches/ folder is outside the apps 'sandbox' so even if a developer would wan't to clean his/her caches they can not do that. Plain and simple, iOS 'sucks' at cache-management...

  • This happened to me with Final Touch. I imported a file for mixing down and once it was done and exported I deleted it but, the size of install for Final Touch increased by the size of the file I mixed down and there was no way to bring it back to default. Deleted Final Touch, reinstalled and install size was back to default. This is a big for sure on Final Touch app. Any one experienced this?

  • @Samu said:

    @wim said:
    You made one BIG mistake ... the part about re-installing those apps.

    Can't upload images to Instagram without the app and the other apps are used to keep in touch with my friends across the globe.

    I think the 'major' issue here is that /Library/Caches/ folder is outside the apps 'sandbox' so even if a developer would wan't to clean his/her caches they can not do that. Plain and simple, iOS 'sucks' at cache-management...

    That's what you get for having friends.

  • wimwim
    edited December 2016

    @syrupcore said:

    @wim said:
    Close all apps, then hold down the power button until you see the power-off slider, but don't slide it. Next hold down the home button until you return to the home screen. This is the only method I would trust personally.

    I didn't realize you could skip the powering down and back up part. Thanks very much for this!

    That little trick is essential. I do it after virtually every session of music making where I'm using IAA apps. I often think that's the secret of my seeming to experience fewer weird things with apps working together than it seems like other people have.

  • @wim said:

    @syrupcore said:

    @wim said:
    Close all apps, then hold down the power button until you see the power-off slider, but don't slide it. Next hold down the home button until you return to the home screen. This is the only method I would trust personally.

    I didn't realize you could skip the powering down and back up part. Thanks very much for this!

    That little trick is essential. I do it after virtually every session of music making where I'm using IAA apps. I often think that's the secret of my seeming to experience fewer weird things with apps working together than it seems like other people have.

    I've been hard rebooting for the same effect. This is much faster!

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