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.

Pro Tip : use Safari reader view to save web-based manuals (such as BM3 or Modstep) neatly to iBooks

You might have an iPad you prefer to use offline, without distraction, or sometimes you just want to read the manual easily and away from distractions - but it's an online manual, not a single file or PDF. Using the reader view in Safari, you can hit the share box/arrow button and scrolling along reveals a button for Save as PDF to iBooks. It formats it nicely too and includes all images.

Hope that's useful!

Comments

  • @Gunark said:
    You might have an iPad you prefer to use offline, without distraction, or sometimes you just want to read the manual easily and away from distractions - but it's an online manual, not a single file or PDF. Using the reader view in Safari, you can hit the share box/arrow button and scrolling along reveals a button for Save as PDF to iBooks. It formats it nicely too and includes all images.

    Hope that's useful!

    Great tip!

  • Super useful. Thanks.

  • edited July 2017

    it's a general function for any web page and works indeed great with PDFs...
    but if applied (as supposed) to a regular page it delivers an amazing bunch of crap >:)

  • I keep trying to NOT use iBooks, but it works so nicely this way.

  • a recent update (to 9.3 probably) caused iBooks to trash all pdfs not purchased. Some were the only copies I had. No garuntee it won't happen again. So I save them to GoodReader instead.

  • It is remarkably difficult to get pdfs back out of iBooks, if you have hundreds of them in there.

  • @Gunark said:
    You might have an iPad you prefer to use offline, without distraction, or sometimes you just want to read the manual easily and away from distractions - but it's an online manual, not a single file or PDF. Using the reader view in Safari, you can hit the share box/arrow button and scrolling along reveals a button for Save as PDF to iBooks. It formats it nicely too and includes all images.

    Hope that's useful!

    F*** yeah! I knew about Safari allowing existing PDF's to be saved to iBooks (if it was from an app's manual link let's say, you'd tap the top right corner or thereabouts of the first page and a dialog box would come up offering to move to iBooks), but anytime a manual wasn't a PDF I'd bookmark it so I could access it online (pain in the ass).

    This feature makes life a whole lot easier and allows all manuals to be in one place, offline, viewable anytime. So cool...thanks man, never saw that option before.

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