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.

Is anyone here still rocking iOS versions less than 16?

edited January 29 in App Development

Just out of curiosity... Though probably not going to get a representative sample...

It doesn't count if you have some sort of secondary device laying around - We're talking your main iDevices for music apps here.

iOS versions poll
  1. I heard you're a vintage gear enjoyer. How committed are you?17 votes
    1. iOS 12
      11.76%
    2. iOS 13
        0.00%
    3. iOS 14
        0.00%
    4. iOS 15
      17.65%
    5. Newer than the above
      70.59%

Comments

  • My ipads are all aging out -- the newest is the 2017 ipad pro. My workflow is all on an iPhone 17 Pro Max that I picked up this year (and is pretty immense).

  • edited January 30

    I still do use both my iPads pretty actively btw -- Pro 2017 (10.5) and Mini 4. They are pretty out of date, but still very competent devices. I use one each in in different studio spaces, hosting various stuff and routing audio/MIDI in AUM. They provide functional roles rather than flexible/experimental command centres.

  • @OscarSouth said:
    I still do use both my iPads pretty actively btw -- Pro 2017 (10.5) and Mini 4. They are pretty out of date, but still very competent devices. I use one each in in different studio spaces, hosting various stuff and routing audio/MIDI in AUM. They provide functional roles rather than flexible/experimental command centres.

    I love my Mini 4! I’m amazed how solid that little guy is still. Agreed that once a Mac was introduced my iPads felt a lot better sticking to a few things they’re good at instead of making them do everything.

  • @FizzyLizzy27 said:

    @OscarSouth said:
    I still do use both my iPads pretty actively btw -- Pro 2017 (10.5) and Mini 4. They are pretty out of date, but still very competent devices. I use one each in in different studio spaces, hosting various stuff and routing audio/MIDI in AUM. They provide functional roles rather than flexible/experimental command centres.

    I love my Mini 4! I’m amazed how solid that little guy is still. Agreed that once a Mac was introduced my iPads felt a lot better sticking to a few things they’re good at instead of making them do everything.

    My Mini 4 has been my longest tenured trooper -- still going strong!!

    For me it was working with MPC devices that pushed the iPads into functional roles. The modern (anything with a touchscreen) MPC plays a similar role as the iPad did for me, but just sacrifices a bit of the convenience of portability with a lot of convenience for connectability. The nature of a fully integrated, long term stable and road-tough unit that you plug everything else on the stage into is just too much of a value proposition for my use cases.

    The iPhone is more of a multimedia command centre for me -- filming/editing/mastering/organisation across different kinds of media etc. I really like that I can focus on creativity 'in the room' and let creative spaces be purely creative, then do all the finalization and admin between places (or in bed/chilling on the sofa).

    Been having fun with getting good iPhone camera footage in dark rooms recently. Going to start posting some new formats of mobile music/knowledge sharing to youtube soon :)

    http://youtube.com/post/UgkxCLS648niihPTuQnU9zV7Td6b0vvr2plD?si=cvRuWGkAvtK5VQx7

  • iPad Air 2 on iOS 12.x. Great for goldies like TC11 or Borderlands Granular. And although there is not a lot of DSP power, it is still a great device for MIDI applications (sequence, filter, effects, control) together with connected hardware.

  • edited January 31

    iPad Mini 4 maxed out at 128 GB, still use it daily for convenience.

    Watch out though - it forced me to update YouTube and now the app won’t run on iOS 15, and the browser won’t let it play videos either, so no more YT on that device.

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