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My wife gave me spiffy new iTouch for Christmas this year, so I've been surfing the App Store for music applications. One that may be of interest to some of you is called TouchOSC. http://hexler.net/touchosc It is basically a small graphical control surface, sort of like a miniature JazzMutant Lemur. On it's own it isn't very interesting, it just sends OSC commands into the air. But when you combine it with the Mac application OSCulator: http://www.osculator.net/wiki you can transform OSC messages into MIDI that can be received by any application that can use virtual MIDI devices. It's really quite easy to set up, here's a tutorial for Ableton Live. http://www.osculator.net/wiki/Main/IPhoneOSCulatorAndAbletonLiveTutorial And of course a patch will be available to let you use it with Mobius. You can use it with hardware devices by routing the virtual MIDI device to a physical MIDI output device. The size is both a plus and a minus. Some control pages like the step sequencer are hard to use accurately because the "buttons" are so small. Then again this could be easily attached to the body of a guitar (no wires!). The main limitation is that it is not velocity sensitive. It is also not at the moment possible to define your own UI layouts. They have a collection of useful layouts, drum pads, sliders, knobs, step sequencer, X-Y grid, etc. but you can't create new ones from scratch. They are supposedly working on a new version that lets you create new layouts. It works with either the iPhone or iTouch. I've read that you can use this with Windows but the setup is much more hacky. OSCulator doesn't run on Windows, the recommended approach is to use a pd (the freeware Max/MSP) patch to do the OSC/MIDI conversion. The cheapest option would be the 8GB iTouch for $230, OSCulator for $40 and TouchOSC for $5 for a total of $275. Still a bit pricey but compared to a $3000 Lemur it's at least accessible. Another product in this vein is iTM MidiLab. I haven't had a chance to check this out yet but here's a shot of their DAW'ish control surface. It seems less flexible in that you have to switch between apps to get different UI layouts. http://www.itouchmidi.com/?q=node/32 Then there's mrmr: http://poly.share.dj/projects/#mrmr This is a little less visually stimulating than TouchOSC but it does let you define your own control layouts. I'll be looking at this next. Happy New Year! Jeff