Yes, you´re wrong. It´s a polyphonic continuous sensitivity and it works as good for me as on my Seaboard Rise (even better in some cases).Echoes in the Attic wrote:I haven't tried the latest iphones with any note triggering apps, but my understanding was that the pressure sensitivity was very limited to sort of light and hard, and I didn't think there was really much continuous pressure sensitivity. Am I wrong about that? Is there actually a usable range of velocities that can be captured? And a decent range of pressure levels?Cinebient wrote:But you get all that already on the latest iPhones (but not on iPads yet).Echoes in the Attic wrote:Yeah I think you're missing the fact that it is velocity sensitive, pressure sensitive, release velocity sensitive as well as the other dimensions that you could get on a touch screen (X and Y).Daags wrote:am I understanding it right that these are essentially touchscreen controllers primarily for touchscreen devices ? ... if so , am I missing something ? why is this a good idea ?
I don´t know if there is midi out in the app.....but that would make this obsolete.
So the blocks would make even more sense for notebooks and desktops.
They work on it but there is "dashboard" for it or?
Velocity is the only downside here. It´s possible but it works with a latency of an extra 10ms because of some workarounds a developer have to made.
But i think 3D touch will evolve too in the future.
For aftertouch events it works even much better for me than on my Rise.
Of course the tactile feedback is missing and i want this for iPad Pro´s.
But how is the tactile feedback on those blocks. Have they a hard surface or similar to the Rise?
But what i like with the on board multi-touch options is that you direct interact with your tools rather than having to use a kind of extension in form of a midi controller etc.
Even if it´s still young in general i think it is the closest to a hardware synth (f.e.) experience where you direct interact with your knobs and always know what knob or slider do this or that.
I don´t like iOS really for it´s limitations and it lacks a lot things i have on my notebook but i begin to think that it will be awesome in the future...ARM will left the Intel i the dark too in a few years.
Synths like Dune 2 and Repro-1 and so are sounding so fantastic but there is no way (beside setting them up with multi channel controller and/or other midi stuff) to play them so expressive out of the box.
It´s a reason i think about to migrate all my synth stuff to an iPad again and record that into my DAW of choice.
Also samplers (real sampler which let you sample) like BeatMaker2 (3 is coming soon) are so much better on a touch screen to interact direct on the GUI instead of an extern midi controller.......uuuuuuhhhh....i´m drifting away already again
Back to the topic...blocks are great but i think still they make more sense for desktops and notebooks instead of an already great multi-touch experience.