![]() ![]() This is my fear regarding a long term investment in apps that aren’t regularly updated. Every iOS update brings with it improvements and derailments, and crashes. I had to resort to using other Daws for months. Last year there was a long time when Auria Pro wouldn’t even recognize my newer usbc audio interfaces, and the update fix took quite a while. That being said, the biggest issue with apps like Auria vs desktop Daws is stability. Auria is probably my favorite and most used app for mixing and production, though I often sketch in GarageBand. Cubasis is a non-starter for me because it doesn’t even offer tempo track change. I think a benefit of a logic on ipad would be the fairly strong guarantee of long term I agree and I love Auria Pro, it fulfills all of my needs because I took almost a year to learn how to use it. I have used Auria for years and love it but it has become increasingly unstable for my workflow and I am worried they are not making enough income to warrant the amount of development work needed to keep it stable. I think a benefit of a logic on ipad would be the fairly strong guarantee of long term said: Its better to know your gear well, than to have great gear! So I'm not sure if someone really needs to have another app to make music on iPad. I have spent a lot of time mastering this application and can assure you that this is indeed the case. And I don't have any restriction of limits making all track with Auria.Īuria (and a lot of other smilar apps you have already own) is a powerfull app that allow you to make almost everything with your audio and midi. Sometimes I start the project within GarageBand on iPad and send it to Mac to finish it on the desktop. I use Logic Pro X on my iMac and Auria on iPad. So I do need this, or whatever alternative that can live up to the “pro” adjective. I don’t use my desktop for music, I’m sitting in front of it all day for work. ![]() So I'm not sure that someone really need this one on iOS. ![]() And it has ~ 100 Gb (with all samples and expansions) on my Mac. IOS DAWs right now are pretty limited, I guess it’s due to the fact that iOS music isn’t not a very juicy said: Cubasis is nothing like Cubase, but if they were going to do that they’d call it GarageBand, so I expect Logic iOS to be significantly powerful and that would be a true game changer for iOS daws. Extensive arranging, cross fades, automation.(again Auria is the most capable in this aspect) Stock plugins for just about everything (audio and midi).If they ported 50% of what’s available in Logic for audio it’d be better. Auria has transient detection and is the only audio-editing capable DAW.BM3 has the best sampler, Logic’s is on par.Currently there’s daws in iOS that can do one thing really well but not another, and some other things that are just missing. There’s dozens of things that would make a huge difference. I am not saying that it wouldn't be a good thing, I'm just interested in how much of the game it would change.ĭepends on how “stripped” down the version is. If it did come to iOS, what would it bring that isn't here already? Are there specific features? Is it more that we would have something approaching a 'real DAW' with a traditional workflow? Do we think it would encourage more development on the platform? I've never used Logic and it's been a while since I used a desktop DAW. ![]()
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