Washington23 »Technology
Print

DJ App Makes Your iPad as Dope as Dre

Djay, by Algoriddim, puts a pair of turntables and a mixer onto the touchscreen of the iPad. I have been playing with it for a day and it’s pretty awesome.
The iPad seems to be an obvious place for the app, which also exists on the Mac. Multitouch makes adjusting sliders, choosing music and — of course — scratching seem like you’re using a real (if very small) DJ setup, and an iPad full of MP3s is a lot more portable than a box of records, or even CDs.
I’m no DJ — when I used to have a bar I banned myself from touching the music as I tended to empty the place with just one song — but Djay is dead easy to use. Pick a track for each deck, in either a popover or fullscreen box, and hit Play.
You can adjust tempo up and down, cross-fade between tracks and even pick up the needle and move it to skip forward or back. The physics are faithful to the real thing: kill the power on a turntable and it doesn’t just stop dead. Instead, you hear the sound quickly slow to a halt.
And then the fancy, computer-only gimmicks begin. Tap Sync to auto-sync the tracks’ speeds (BPM), and tap the arrow next to the cross-fader to auto-mix between them. You can pick the type of transition — backspin, brake, reverse and others — and you’ll sound like a pro. Which brings us on to scratching.
Scratching properly is hard. It’s equally hard to do well in Djay. If you put a finger on the record and wiggle it, you’ll get that scratchy sound, but it sounds terrible. Switch to two fingers, though, and scratching gets smart, and Djay “automatically applies the rhythmic pattern of the currently playing song to your scratches in real time.” What that means is that you come on all DMC, again sounding like the pro you’re not.
There’s a whole lot more: When you open a track, for instance, the app analyzes it, shows you a waveform and works out the BPM. When you scratch (or just cue up a spot in the track), the waveform zooms in to help you get to the right spot. You can also set a cue-point and hit a button to skip back to it. You can even put a virtual piece of tape on the record to keep track of where you are.
Finally, it plays nice with iOS 4, with background audio (and auto-mixing!) and AirPlay support (this suffers from the usual two-second delay, making it impossible to use for actual mixing, although Bluetooth speakers fare better), and access to your full music library and playlists.
It’s a lot of fun, and kept me up to 2 a.m. this morning. Like I said, I’m a hopeless selector, but real DJs should get a whole lot from the app, especially as you can split the output and send one signal to the speakers and another to a pair of headphones. This is done with a stereo-to-mono adapter in the jack-socket, giving two mono outputs. I tried putting a USB sound-adapter (via the camera connection kit) into the dock-connector and it works, but kills the headphone output. It seems the iPad will only use one at a time.
Djay costs $20. Combine this with something like the block-rocking, battery-powered SuperTooth speaker and you have yourself a pretty sweet portable party.
Djay for iPad [Algoriddim]
See Also:

Portable DJ Gadget Improves UI with Second Version
Pacemaker DJ System: A Party in Your Pocket
Farewell, SL-1200: Panasonic Scratches Iconic Technics Turntable …
iPhone Turntable App Will Land You in the Nuthouse
Ears-On With the SuperTooth Disco Bluetooth Boombox

Fuente: Gadget Lab

No comments

Leave a comment

Image Navigator

Poll: 3G and better battery life or 4G and constant charging?Chilean Miner Rescue is a very slow-paced and heart-warming Time WasterAdobe Reacts to New iPhone App PolicyUser Experience Lead Sought for Google TV, but Where Are the Apps?Get a Head Start on 3DDGH Character CreationSkaterack Holds You Board On Your BikeNew Comcast XFINITY TV App Channel Surfs Into the Android MarketThe Second Inauguration of Barack ObamaHTML5 MP3 player lets you listen to your music library inside your browserAutomakers Slim Down With Weight Loss Support GroupTwitter introduces push notifications for mentions and direct messagesIntroducing the next step in Web app development: Google's Native ClientFluid Water Simulation is a lovely Java toy - Time-WasterHeavyweight Showdown in This Week’s Episode 3 of ‘The Tester 2’Obama calls Boehner after GOP wins House majorityegrinberg
		President Obama
		Google rigs search results to help prevent suicideDUST 514 Update Adds EVE Online Integration, Keyboard and Mouse Controls, And MoreWhat You Missed: Open for Questions on Women in AmericaWalmart Lists Ico/Shadow of the Colossus CollectionThe Incredible Camera Showdown: Droid Incredible VS Nexus OneOneLouder’s 1Weather gets big 2.0 updateDragon’s Dogma Classes RevealedFrench Website Makes Euro-Carpooling A SnapMash-up: Will you marry me?jkavcnn
		proposal irpt
		Clinton finger wag
		De Niro
		And Just Like That, Nexus S Rooted and Running Clockwork RecoveryAndroid Market Gets Movies in the UKSamsung Galaxy Tab Gets Stripped Bare NakedWeek 13 IDP Linebacker Rankings