What size iPad should I get?
Hi, I am a total Noob to iOS music-making (used to make music with an MPC 2000 ten years ago) but am planning on getting myself the new iPad this month, and buying BeatMaker 2.
My question is: what size (storage-wise) iPad should I get? 64gb? 128? I don't know how big either the software is (and I want to explore a few options, like the iMPC, Tabletop, other things) nor do I know if the music-related things I would be able to store locally are very big (like HD video is). In addition to music, I will be using it for work (I am a teacher - the initial reason for getting an iPad. We use Apps like Notability, Confer, Edmodo, BookCreator and of course photos and videos).
I'm also not a cloud-user - yet, at least. I have used Dropbox for work-related stuff on occasion.
Any advice would be appreciated - thanks.
My question is: what size (storage-wise) iPad should I get? 64gb? 128? I don't know how big either the software is (and I want to explore a few options, like the iMPC, Tabletop, other things) nor do I know if the music-related things I would be able to store locally are very big (like HD video is). In addition to music, I will be using it for work (I am a teacher - the initial reason for getting an iPad. We use Apps like Notability, Confer, Edmodo, BookCreator and of course photos and videos).
I'm also not a cloud-user - yet, at least. I have used Dropbox for work-related stuff on occasion.
Any advice would be appreciated - thanks.
Comments
Also Dropbox is a crucial feature of BM2.
I usually sample from vinyl on desktop, save into Dropbox, turn around to the iPad and my samples are right there.
Everyday! Dropbox is very important in my work flow. This is where A simple BM desktop app would benefit. Basically sketch a song with all my chops. Boom dropbox to iPad.
get 64.
With bm2 there are some things you have to manage your space....
1. Make sure you are aware of the file system, make sure you are saving your songs with samples in their own folders. This one step will help you with saving songs to your cloud, or computer, or Dropbox. It will also make it easier for you to collaborate with others.
2. When recording audio, bm2 will save everything you do...regardless if you keep the take or not...this will get put into the recordings folder...once you have saved a song with all of its samples you will be able to erase the contents of the recordings folder and gain space. Usually lots.
3. Remember the downside to sampling on bm2 is that you need to have a song folder made before you start sampling for a song or you will be saving replicate copies of the same material over and over thus killing your save space. Another downside to using beatmaker2 is when you save a song with samples...it is going to resave your instrument patches, as well as any drums etc that you used to make the song. Bm2 is not reason...or logic...it has no logical file structure at all, it can NOT search and find files that are missing...it can only have a nameplace on a pad so name all of your samples so you know what they are.
Beatmaker2 is highly inefficient when saving and space are an issue.
Only the sample name placing has been addressed the whole time of this apps existence, meaning the file system is probably as good as it's gonna be.
That said, a Mac is def on my to do list!
I would think given your disdain for any kind of manual labor (trimming, time aligning tracks etc) you would hate the iconnectivity.
On another note isn't the iconnectivity thing similar to virtual midi(I think that what it's called)? I don't see the added benefits of that device verses using wifi to control your PC?
Is it that the device can record sound as well from the ipad versus just giving you the ability to control an app on the computer while using the Ipad like a midi controller?