![]() When I started out, I had to put in the hours at work (after school) to afford the price of some second-hand belt-driven decks and a budget mixer. Maybe not as obvious as the previous section, but by this I mean the domination by Apple in the mobile touchscreen market means that the potential for apps to be purchased and used by customers is huge. And the more you practise, the better you get (for some people, these may be the only times they get to kick back and do a bit of DJing in otherwise prohibitively busy lives). Last year my journey home from BPM was spent trying out ideas for a mix on my iPod Touch with the DJ Player app. One of the main reasons I am spending more time on iOS devices rather than behind my trusty turntables is because they are neat, handheld portable devices which can easily be popped into your bag on the way anywhere. Don’t bank on that staying the case for long, though.) 1. We’d love to see Android developments, but there’s practically nothing to report on – yet. (By the way, before we go any further, this is basically an iOS world at the moment. And we think it’s going to be absolutely massive. But mobile DJing (we’re talking with mobile devices, not at your sister’s 18th) is very new indeed. Of course, “laptop” DJing is established nowadays – although it’s still not accepted in some isolated pockets. If something opens up fresh possibilities or gets our craft into places it has hitherto not reached (and even better, into the hands of people who haven’t yet tried it), we are right behind it. ![]() If you’re anything like a regular around here, you’ll know that we love to champion all that’s new in DJing. ![]() IRig’s new hardware and software is just the latest entry into a busier and busier iOS DJing world.
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