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I tested this Cycler thing. Some of my findings may be inaccurate due to lack of documentation, so here goes: For whom it may concern, I tested on a WinXP x64 platform with RME HDSP hardware. GENERAL CONCEPT: Cycler is a multi-track, multi-layer looper which seems to be optimized for tempo-based material. About "multi-layer": from the way it is displayed on the screen, it seems that subsequent overdubs are recorded into additional samples which are played back together - so you can always undo properly. However, there doesn't seem to be a way to selectively remove specific overdubs (but this understanding of the concept may be inaccurate). There are eight individual loopers, which share a common tempo based on the first looper: after you record your first loop using the typical "record-record" procedure, a bpm tempo is extracted from this and then used for all other loopers, where you specifiy the loop length in number of bars. There's an effects section, where you can assign virtual stompboxes to each looper and pre-looper. There's the usual variety of effects (delay, flanger, chorus, distortion), of which the time-based effects can be synced to the bpm tempo, and a tricky one called "mini blocks" which will playback granular sections of the loop and allows for some very tricky rhythmic loop mangling. The user interface is a little baffling to me: first of all, while some functions are accessible by mouse or a button, others seem to be available only via MIDI (like recording a loop). Fortunately, you can also use your keyboard to assign keys to those functions via a learn function. There's a concept of "users" (and I don't know what that means - only that they can be assigned to control the various loops independently - perhaps for two guys with MIDI controllers controlling one instance of this software?), and then there's commands which work per loop and others which work on the currently selected loop. While this makes sense that you might want to be available to hit "reverse" for several tracks at one while you only record to one track at a time, this makes working a little counterintutive at times - and more, why can't you "undo" on any track you like without selecting it first? While were at it, a few more points of critizism in no particular order: While the "audio settings" dialogue allows you to select your audio interface and in case of ASIO interfaces, select the channels you want to use, this does not seem to work: with my HDSP, I was only able to use input channels 1 and 2. Also, the channel selecting dialogue is a little buggy. While the user interface in general looks rather "normal", the effects are displayed as virtual stompboxes. While this does look cool, it is my personal experience that screen real estate and readability are an issue, and so a screen component which has grey writing in script on a bright orange housing model and uses 80% of the used screen real estate for displaying oldskool knobs, LED housings etc. does not make sense. In rounding this off, Cycler seems to me more of a performance sampler than what the ambient/sound design crowd understands as a looper. You can't adjust feedback, no first loop capability except for the first loop etc. On the other hand, a clearly laid out multi-track interface (together with waveform dsiplay on the screen!) will probably work very well with DJ-kind of use. This is especially true if you want to avoid to setup a complex software construct (e.g. Mobius in Live or similar) and just make use of the looper and its built-in effects. It will remain to be seen how and where this software will find a place in the loop world. From how I currently work, this is "not for me" so to speak, but I'm sure that a lot of the more song/dance-oriented artists may find a use for it. Rainer