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.

what happened to the arturia iMini app?

I bought this years ago and went to download it and it says it’s not available in my area?

Comments

  • edited September 1

    Arturia has left the building when it comes to iOS software and from what I’ve heard they are not planning on coming back. I doubt they will spend resources on updating stuff.

    /DMfan🇸🇪

  • edited September 1

    Hi. People have noticed a few apps dropped from the iOS App Store recently, possibly because they're not up to date. iMini may be the latest of these. Or it could just be an oversight by Arturia.

    Edit: This video is three years old, but may still be relevant. In fact, the only Arturia app I can find is the recent AstroLab Connect.

  • edited September 2

    @Coloobar said:
    I bought this years ago and went to download it and it says it’s not available in my area?

    I’ve had a strange experience that might help on this one. An app I purchased a long time back became “unavailable in my area” very long while ago, and i had given up on, long gone from the store, and both the working and dead button to reinstall in the Purchased dashboard had even disappeared.

    This was in Los Angeles, and then in Iceland. Recently I started using a (paid) VPN, set to a couple different server in the US, and the app reappeared in my Purchased list, with a button, and I was able to download it. This was a very old app, which I loved and I was very pleased to say the least. Getting it back was very strange. I had written the dev about bringing it back to iOS and had been ignored. The thing does still exist on Steam and I had paid for it there, but I really wanted it back on the iPad and here it is.

    YRMV, but this may work on some other stuff you have given up on. Maybe you have tried this already. I have not tried this with iMini (uninstalling then reinstalling because Im afraid it won’t work, and I do use it as an app in the Tabletop container

  • iSEM is gone too…

  • wimwim
    edited September 8

    @pseudophysics said:
    iSEM is gone too…

    You know there are two places to look, right?

    Apps can be no longer available to purchase, but still available in your purchased items. That’s often the case. Apps generally only go completely missing if the developer closes out their developer account. (Or if they’re super old and got purged due to only being 32 bit.)

    ISEM is one of those apps. It isn’t listed for sale, but is still in my purchased items.

  • @wim said:

    @pseudophysics said:
    iSEM is gone too…

    You know there are two places to look, right?

    Apps can be no longer available to purchase, but still available in your purchased items. That’s often the case. Apps generally only go completely missing if the developer closes out their developer account. (Or if they’re super old and got purged due to only being 32 bit.)

    ISEM is one of those apps. It isn’t listed for sale, but is still in my purchased items.

    Yep, I have it on my iPad

    Just in general, this for me is the biggest reason, why these apps should only cost a fraction of what they cost for pc/mac

  • What I meant was, even if you didn’t have ISEM on sour iPad, you’d still be able to install it in this case. Maybe you know that but you’d be surprised how many people don’t.

  • I know this but thanks for the heads up

  • Even some Desktop developers can exit the market and their stuff can no longer be downloaded since they shut down their operations completely.

    I never understood the point of Arturia's iMini and iProphet IAA-Ports in the first place (they was done by Retronyms) considering that Arturias first offering iSem was one of the first AUv3's to drop and iMini and iProphet were IAA/AB only...

    iSem was done by nLog developer who is now working for Walrdorf.

    So it's fully understandable if Arturia wants to pull out from the AppStore especially since it was not 'in-house development' but relied on 3rd party developers working on contract basis...

  • @Samu said:
    Even some Desktop developers can exit the market and their stuff can no longer be downloaded since they shut down their operations completely.

    But you will still be able to get an older OS on a computer and install the software

  • I still have an iPad mini2 in 32 bit mode with some cool apps. If the battery is dead… poof!

    I need to find a way to use that old thing without a battery. There are some howtos online. Someone should sell a DIY kit

  • @pseudophysics said:

    @Samu said:
    Even some Desktop developers can exit the market and their stuff can no longer be downloaded since they shut down their operations completely.

    But you will still be able to get an older OS on a computer and install the software

    If you can find it for download and the old activation server happens to be running :)
    Or you can always find a [k] copy of the app in the internet...

    It will be a pita to integrate the old computer into a modern work-flow so sometimes it's just better to 'move on' and forget the old stuff, Moog already dropped a far superior Mini Moog emulation (Model D), it's even given out free from time to time.

    It's not like iSem or iMini were 'expensive' to begin with, you can't even get a cup of coffee for the price of both apps together.

    On top of that both apps are pretty darn unstable on modern devices, while I can still download both from my purchased items list them have since long been replaced by other apps...

    Apps are NOT an 'Investment' they are a 'Commodity' that can more or less be replaced by something else.

  • never had problems with getting older pc systems running. my studios main computer is a pretty old mac. some of my synths are even older. and i can still make music with all of this, that gets released

    maybe these are mainly a commodity to you. not for me

    im all in for defending developers. its more that apple is the problem. the ipad is a pretty cool device though

  • Hi,

    You will own nothing eventually. Stuff like this is what made me ditch apple desktops. It seems they could give a crap about their customers. IMHO.

  • @pseudophysics said:
    I still have an iPad mini2 in 32 bit mode with some cool apps. If the battery is dead… poof!

    I need to find a way to use that old thing without a battery. There are some howtos online. Someone should sell a DIY kit

    I have an old iPad Airv2 in my collection, and, after ten years the battery holds strong!
    There I have a lot for old 32-bits music making apps that I never will give up on...

  • Although for some reason I can't install iSEM on the new iPad Pro

  • It’s really not about owning and investment to me. > @ninobeatz said:

    yayr!

Sign In or Register to comment.