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 StoreLoopy Pro is your all-in-one musical toolkit. Try it for free today.
"Document Storage" on iOS / iPadOS defaults to iCloud!
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Comments
I definitely don’t like it. It’s one of the first things I do is disable iCloud and any kind of “auto-update” functions.
You're right. And I even suspect they waste some of the internal space with trash files to force you to store your photos on iCloud storage.
I haven't such amount of photos on my iPhone.
The funny thing is that this option even appears for apps that haven't ever officially registered for this stuff. For example it also appears for Xequence, even though it doesn't contain any code or plist keys to support this, but users still "think" it should work because it's there, and then send me angry support emails!
Yeah, kind of lame.
(I know, I'm late to the party...)
This. I've probably tried to explain twenty times to people why there's no iCloud folder when apps have this enabled. It doesn't make sense to them even when you explain it's just a permission setting and that the app has to specifically support it for this option to do anything.
But, that's just Apple being Apple. Either it simply doesn't register with them that everyone in the world wouldn't immediately jump on their brilliant ideas, or it's their passive-aggressive way of putting pressure on developers to adopt what they want them to. Probably a bit of both.
Chuckled at the "passive-aggressive" bit well yeah... you actually have to set a flag in info.plist so it would've been trivial for Apple to hide this Settings option if that flag isn't enabled for an app...
It's about as bad an UI/UX blunder as the world-famous "Processing Payment..." message when "buying" a FREE app! (since iOS 11? and still not fixed)