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Hi Tyler, You're perfectly right about that - it is indeed like a tablet. You can put on a table, on the floor, hold in you hand or mount it on a mic stand. The user interface is well designed with a number of touch pads (six I think...?) so you really don't need much visual control to work it when making music. The looper is not multi channel, like the latest VoiceLive 3 has. I think the VL#3 allows up to three simultaneous loops of different lengths. Randolf Arriola on this list has a VL 3 so he should be able to answer up for that. Myself I have a VoiceLive 2 and once when doing a live looping clinic at the university I borrowed the school's VoiceLive Touch - that's how I got to know it. It's been around for a while but the voice sound patches are legendary, cant be better actually. (but different, like in the VC 3, since it has a bit more effects). Greetings from Sweden Per Boysen www.perboysen.com http://www.youtube.com/perboysen On Thu, Apr 3, 2014 at 10:37 PM, Tyler <programmer651@comcast.net> wrote: > I have been working with a looping artist for a number of years now. She > is not on this mailing list, and I have > known her longer than this mailing list. I found this list when Google > searching. But anyway, in late > 2012, she said she got this TC Helicon VoiceLive Touch. Do any of you > know about this > device? I believe it's like a tablet, not a loop pedal or software. I > could ask her, but I'm > asking you guys because this is a (mostly live) looping website, and > some of you may have experience with > VoiceLive Touch. > Tyler Z >