Audiobus: Use your music apps together.

What is Audiobus?Audiobus is an award-winning music app for iPhone and iPad which lets you use your other music apps together. Chain effects on your favourite synth, run the output of apps or Audio Units into an app like GarageBand or Loopy, or select a different audio interface output for each app. Route MIDI between apps — drive a synth from a MIDI sequencer, or add an arpeggiator to your MIDI keyboard — or sync with your external MIDI gear. And control your entire setup from a MIDI controller.

Download on the App Store

Audiobus is the app that makes the rest of your setup better.

Which country are you occupying? Is it güd?

Or alternatively, which countries have you also lived in, by comparison. Reviews.

Comments

  • Originally, West Germany. Was it güd? I couldn’t say. Wasn’t old enough to form an opinion.
    Presently, Canada. Is it güd? I can say yes. I leave it every now and then to get a perspective. Always appreciate the return home.

  • Socialist Republic of South Austin. Weirüd.

  • Best place I ever lived in was DONKEY

  • For some years in my live the best place was a cheap (and great) pizza restaurant. It was so good!

  • I'm going to be so glad when these pointless threads run their course and we can get back to regular programming here. Off-topic or not.

  • Aha. He lives in grumpyland.

  • Well, look at his nick. I'd also be frustrated if I had to look at stuff like "%.03d %d%%" all the time :D (inside joke!)

  • @fprintf said:
    I'm going to be so glad when these pointless threads run their course and we can get back to regular programming here. Off-topic or not.

    Programming? I thought this was an iOS music forum?

  • @u0421793 said:
    Aha. He lives in grumpyland.

    I hear they have an immigrant problem.

  • Americuh unfortunately. Although also Austin which is great. I'm gonna move to Portugal soon. Has anyone been?

  • I got to stay in Trieste, Italy for one month as a child. My parents were raised in the town of Piran, formerly Italy, then annexed > Yugoslavia > Slovania.

    Currently, my body is in USA but my mind in Fillory.

  • Originally from Croydon area, moved to Ewell/Epsom, now residing in Paphos (Cyprus)........ Was going to emergrate to "The Isle if White" once, but thought not.. :D

  • Wow. So many exotic places I've never heard. Is Epsom where they make Epsom Salt?

  • Originally from the Watford area, parents moved out to Papua New Guinea for four years, taking me with them for the first year, stayed with relatives in Melbourne for second and third, back to PNG for fourth, then back to UK to Sussex for art college. When we went out to PNG initially, Queen were just in their first week or so of No.1-ness with BoRhap, and by the time I came back, punk had happened and moved on. I remember hearing Tubeway Army for the first time from out in the highlands of PNG in 1979 over a short wave radio, fading in and out over a very high noise floor, which set the scene for when I came back to the UK in the middle of an extremely grey and cold (but so unbelievably grey) winter.

  • @Beathoven said:

    @fprintf said:
    I'm going to be so glad when these pointless threads run their course and we can get back to regular programming here. Off-topic or not.

    Programming? I thought this was an iOS music forum?

    Believe it or not, somebody has to do it. ;)

  • Portlandia.

  • edited February 2018

    Born and lived my childhood years in Cape Town South Africa. Now living in U.S.A. Also near Portlandia:)

  • Grew up near Heathrow airport in London, lived in Brighton for bit the South London. moved to Rochester ny (about an hr from Niagara falls) 10 years ago

  • Uk: Great because they let us vape without too much fuss except the stupid EU tobacco directive. Great because they don’t take people away in the night and imprison them for no good reason.
    Crap because we let those more unfortunate starve on the streets and we are part of the stupid money means more than life society that is common among humans.

  • UK. Great because we just got on the scariest rollercoaster in the park, but I think I’ll love it once it’s over.

  • @u0421793 said:
    Originally from the Watford area, parents moved out to Papua New Guinea for four years, taking me with them for the first year, stayed with relatives in Melbourne for second and third, back to PNG for fourth, then back to UK to Sussex for art college. When we went out to PNG initially, Queen were just in their first week or so of No.1-ness with BoRhap, and by the time I came back, punk had happened and moved on. I remember hearing Tubeway Army for the first time from out in the highlands of PNG in 1979 over a short wave radio, fading in and out over a very high noise floor, which set the scene for when I came back to the UK in the middle of an extremely grey and cold (but so unbelievably grey) winter.

    I lived in Moresby (Port, capital of PNG) for three years in the early 70s. Remember arriving back in the UK in the middle of winter and not having any shoes. Hadn't owned any for the whole time, just wore thongs. We had to drive straight from Heathrow to M&S in Watford to buy clothes.
    Radio over there had zero pop music in those days. The local station was set up by the Australian ABC and all the records they had been given seemed to be The Andrews Sisters and the like.
    Luckily my parents had lots of records like The Beatles and Neil Young.

  • edited February 2018

    @pauly said:

    @u0421793 said:
    Originally from the Watford area, parents moved out to Papua New Guinea for four years, taking me with them for the first year, stayed with relatives in Melbourne for second and third, back to PNG for fourth, then back to UK to Sussex for art college. When we went out to PNG initially, Queen were just in their first week or so of No.1-ness with BoRhap, and by the time I came back, punk had happened and moved on. I remember hearing Tubeway Army for the first time from out in the highlands of PNG in 1979 over a short wave radio, fading in and out over a very high noise floor, which set the scene for when I came back to the UK in the middle of an extremely grey and cold (but so unbelievably grey) winter.

    I lived in Moresby (Port, capital of PNG) for three years in the early 70s. Remember arriving back in the UK in the middle of winter and not having any shoes. Hadn't owned any for the whole time, just wore thongs. We had to drive straight from Heathrow to M&S in Watford to buy clothes.
    Radio over there had zero pop music in those days. The local station was set up by the Australian ABC and all the records they had been given seemed to be The Andrews Sisters and the like.
    Luckily my parents had lots of records like The Beatles and Neil Young.

    Yep. Similar, but between 76-79. We were in Lae, for the first year, then the parents went to Moresby for two more years while I went to school in Melbourne, then we all came back to Goroka for a fourth year, by which time I’d become a photographer and also got a job at Talair in the avionics department (Talair is no more). We had a reel-to-reel recorder, with (for example) Fleetwood Mac / Rumours (and the preceding album) on tape.

    When I was at school in Lae, they managed to get us on the radio (NBC by then - since independence, we now had 1 radio station!) to do a weekly radio show, and I did the theme music in the radio studio with an overdubbed Jews Harp or two, and it was actually an attempt at Kraftwerk’s Ruckzack crossed with another Kraftwerk track of the time (can’t remember the name) – nobody knew what on earth it was, they just thought it was me going at it on the Jews Harp. It kind of went along with the spirit and ethos of the flute / Kundu drum sig tune they used for the NBC radio news.

  • We spent a month or so in Goroka on a dig (archaeological dig, that is) in a village called Chauve. Amazing scenery there, limestone with huge rivers that would just disappear into the ground and what seemed like a perfect climate. I remember the locals used to look forward to being arrested after tribal battles because they liked the food they were given in jail - canned corned beef.
    I hear that it got a lot rougher after we left, but kind of idyllic when we were there.

  • @StMichaels said:
    Born and lived my childhood years in Cape Town South Africa. Now living in U.S.A. Also near Portlandia:)

    I’m from Cape Town too, any advice on immigrating to the US?

  • edited February 2018

    @raindro said:
    Americuh unfortunately. Although also Austin which is great. I'm gonna move to Portugal soon. Has anyone been?

    >

    Not Portugal, but very familiar with Portuguese island Madeira. That, my friend, is paradise on Earth.

    As for my location, South Coast of UK. It’s a beautiful place, with lots of lovely people. The only problem, like most places in the world, the country is run by fuckwits.

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