What is Audiobus? — Audiobus isan award-winning music app for iPhone and iPad which lets you useyour other music apps together. Chain effects on your favouritesynth, run the output of apps or Audio Units into an app likeGarageBand or Loopy, or select a different audio interface outputfor each app. Route MIDI between apps — drive asynth from a MIDI sequencer, or add an arpeggiator to your MIDIkeyboard — or sync with your external MIDI gear.And control your entire setup from a MIDI controller.
Apollo Twin X DUO delivers elite-class A/D and D/A conversion, two Unison-enabled preamps, full LUNA Recording System integration (Mac), and Realtime UAD plug-in processing — all in a sleek desktop Thunderbolt 3 audio interface for Mac and Windows. ITunes is the default audio player in Mac OS X Snow Leopard. In addition to the standard volume controls, iTunes offers a full equalizer. An equalizer permits you to alter the levels of.
I know you have equalizers for Mac and Windows that can control everything what runs and makes sound on the platforms. But is there an app for iOS that can do the same. It's just meant to control my headphones (Audio. A system wide audio equalizer program for Mac OS X. Improves your Audio Listening on OSX / macOS. Experience Music on your Mac, how it is meant to be. Free Open Source Mac.
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I know you have equalizers for Mac and Windows that can control everything what runs and makes sound on the platforms. But is there an app for iOS that can do the same. It's just meant to control my headphones (Audio Technica M50x) in my opinion they have too much bass, so I want to control the low. Also different solutions (hardware?) are welcome.
Sound Equalizer For Mac
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- edited February 2018
I've been looking also recently into this and discovered that that there are only equalizers for music available if you use a regular iOS device. However at the beginning of this year a free iOS tweak was launched called EQE that does exactly what you want BUT you need a jailbroken device
Whole review of the app here
EQE brings a system-wide equalizer to your jailbroken device
http://www.idownloadblog.com/2017/12/16/eqe-review/.So after the app economy undermining give away expensive stuff for free to the rich guys action buy INTUA probably another reason to jailbreak your device. With this kind of developments I predict jailbreaking will become more and more popular.
@mannix said:
... With this kind of developments I predict jailbreaking will become more and more popular.If you don't mind to stop updating your iOS, that is. The vast majority of iOS users don't care about jailbreaking, they will accept everything that is A) new and from Apple.
For music lovers, the JB route indeed seems the better way to go, not only that you can make your iDevice much more useful and enjoyable, but also you're able to transfer files between apps freely, erase gigabytes of sound content individually without destroying the app, and access your own song and sample data even in apps that don't support consistent file sharing. You could even auto-sync the files with your desktop/laptop without the nasty restrictions of iTunes, and back up any app version you want.@greengrocer said:
I know you have equalizers for Mac and Windows that can control everything what runs and makes sound on the platforms. But is there an app for iOS that can do the same. It's just meant to control my headphones (Audio Technica M50x) in my opinion they have too much bass, so I want to control the low. Also different solutions (hardware?) are welcome.Settings > Music > Playback > EQ
@LucidMusicInc said:
@greengrocer said:
I know you have equalizers for Mac and Windows that can control everything what runs and makes sound on the platforms. But is there an app for iOS that can do the same. It's just meant to control my headphones (Audio Technica M50x) in my opinion they have too much bass, so I want to control the low. Also different solutions (hardware?) are welcome.Settings > Music > Playback > EQ
That’s cool, but not system wide.
@LucidMusicInc said:
@greengrocer said:
I know you have equalizers for Mac and Windows that can control everything what runs and makes sound on the platforms. But is there an app for iOS that can do the same. It's just meant to control my headphones (Audio Technica M50x) in my opinion they have too much bass, so I want to control the low. Also different solutions (hardware?) are welcome.Settings > Music > Playback > EQ
That’s not system wide it’s only for iTunes playback.
@wim said:
@LucidMusicInc said:
@greengrocer said:
I know you have equalizers for Mac and Windows that can control everything what runs and makes sound on the platforms. But is there an app for iOS that can do the same. It's just meant to control my headphones (Audio Technica M50x) in my opinion they have too much bass, so I want to control the low. Also different solutions (hardware?) are welcome.Settings > Music > Playback > EQ
That’s not system wide it’s only for iTunes playback.
Yes unfortunately. There's quite a view specialized apps like equalizer pro that can do the same. Besides software solutions you could of course also look for a portable headphone amp/ equalizer but most off the come with a high pricetag.
This one on the other had is relatively cheap:
Thank you all for the suggestions. @mannix this jailbreak app you suggest is exactly what I was looking for. Unfortunately I don't like to jailbreak my devices so not really an option. Would be great I Apple would give devs more freedom and would devs develop such an app so it could be distributed through the appstore.
External devices seem to be not really easy available, probably there's not a market for it. So this brings everything back to the type of headphones you use. Saw differnt threads about this subject. Will dig deeper in it.@mannix said:
I've been looking also recently into this and discovered that that there are only equalizers for music available if you use a regular iOS device. However at the beginning of this year a free iOS tweak was launched called EQE that does exactly what you want BUT you need a jailbroken deviceWhole review of the app here
EQE brings a system-wide equalizer to your jailbroken device
http://www.idownloadblog.com/2017/12/16/eqe-review/.So after the app economy undermining give away expensive stuff for free to the rich guys action buy INTUA probably another reason to jailbreak your device. With this kind of developments I predict jailbreaking will become more and more popular.
Jailbreaking is great as long as you don’t want your devices to run well and to be vulnerable to all kinds of nasty stuff. I have a jail broken iPad 1 just because it’s so outdated that there’s very little I can do with it now and it doesn’t go online anyway, and I was hoping that there was something thapt developed that allowed it to be forced to ios 6 but there’s not. So I basically leave it alone and it’s a nanostudio tablet and a mackie controller (when that decides to work on a given day) basically. But I had a jail broken iPhone 4s many years ago, that I eventually “jailed” again. I did it for control center, which didn’t exist yet, but once ios7 hit and control center came in, back in jail it went and it ran much much better.
And stealing apps is not a reason to jailbreak no matter what any company decided to do with their product. I didn’t even know you could steal ios apps, but I’m not interested in doing it.
- edited February 2018
@mrufino1 said:
@mannix said:
I've been looking also recently into this and discovered that that there are only equalizers for music available if you use a regular iOS device. However at the beginning of this year a free iOS tweak was launched called EQE that does exactly what you want BUT you need a jailbroken deviceWhole review of the app here
EQE brings a system-wide equalizer to your jailbroken device
http://www.idownloadblog.com/2017/12/16/eqe-review/.So after the app economy undermining give away expensive stuff for free to the rich guys action buy INTUA probably another reason to jailbreak your device. With this kind of developments I predict jailbreaking will become more and more popular.
Jailbreaking is great as long as you don’t want your devices to run well and to be vulnerable to all kinds of nasty stuff. I have a jail broken iPad 1 just because it’s so outdated that there’s very little I can do with it now and it doesn’t go online anyway, and I was hoping that there was something thapt developed that allowed it to be forced to ios 6 but there’s not. So I basically leave it alone and it’s a nanostudio tablet and a mackie controller (when that decides to work on a given day) basically. But I had a jail broken iPhone 4s many years ago, that I eventually “jailed” again. I did it for control center, which didn’t exist yet, but once ios7 hit and control center came in, back in jail it went and it ran much much better.
And stealing apps is not a reason to jailbreak no matter what any company decided to do with their product. I didn’t even know you could steal ios apps, but I’m not interested in doing it.
What I understood it can make iOS unstable and what you say also security is high on my agenda. I do a lot with y iDevices. Interesting though is that there are apps that really make the device more interactive. Especially the app @mannix came up with.
Can wholeheartly agree with you about stealing apps. But I can understand that a group of people can become frustrated paying for expensive apps that become free and at a certain level decide not paying anymore for those apps.