so my setup for years has been: i plug my guitar and mic into a presonus 24c. Then i hook that into the ipad pro. from there i bring up audiobus and from the input, i choose input 2(my guitar) and in the second one i choose ampkit, and in the 3rd one output i choose loopy hd. That has worked for all my live shows flawlessly, but now i see i cannot add loopy pro to the 3rd one (output). My effects one is taken up by my ampkit, it doesnt work putting ampkit in the first input of audiobus.

ahhh. So heres the thing. I have a presonus 24c interface, i plug my guitar into input 2. I bring up audiobus and on the first section (inputs) I choose ampkit. when i open ampkit, you would select your input channel on bottom right, however, it only says Audiobus as input and does not generate any input into ampkit. So I remove that and in the input section of audiobus, I choose the other option that shows my 24c's two channels. I select input 2 and in the second section (fx) of audiobus I choose ampkit and it recognizes it with no issue as my input. With loopy pro now being on the middle section, I have to add it as a second effect which doesnt get the sound from ampkit into it. Is there a way to get the sound from the FX channel ampkit to the FX channel loopy pro?


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Do you have any recommendations or can you guide me what gear options to buy and what settings I need to set, in order for my ipad mini 4 + loopy + flute instrument to work, so that I can output live effects over the flute, and hear them over speakers (i am open to speakers recommendations too) in addition to obviously creating loops?

Do you have any recommendations or can you guide me what gear options to buy and what settings I need to set, in order for my ipad mini 4 + loopy + flute instrument to work, so that I can output live effects over the flute

I had posted similar question in AUM forum also but looks like there is no native AUM Looper app yet .

I also ended up in a simple consulated wiring with Audiobus as the pipe from aum to loopy and back...

Wonder when we get a simple Loop player as a target for aum

I exited loopy and went to bed. This morning I opened loopy and 1 of only 10 loops did not playback at the correct tempo. Yesterday loopy said bpm is 120 & today it might say 240 or whatever. Something is changing this stuff.

But just to make sure; here is what I want to do. In AUM, I have loopy pro, and in a different track I have an interapp audio (e.g. samplr, bordelands, etc). Is there any way to record from this track (samplr in my example) to one of the clips inside Loopy Pro? 

Perhaps the question is more general, can Loopy Pro record from another track inside AUM (audio, midi, interapp, anything)?

Edging: With Color of choice (B shown), join to 1st st of last round with a sl st. Ch 1, sc in 1st st, sc 3 in each loop across. Ch 2, sc evenly down side, being sure to cover floats. Ch 2, sc across foundation chain, ch 2, sc evenly up other side, sc 2. Join to first sc with a sl st and fasten off, or use the seamless join to finish.

Where it says Ch 1, sc 1st st, sc 3 in each loop across. - Is this the only place where there are 3 sc in each stitch or am I reading this wrong. this is for the loopy love blanket.

Some of Aravaipa Running\u2019s events feature repeat loops, most notably the Javelina Jundred 100M/100K featuring laps of approx. 20 miles. I have not run Javelina, but I ran Aravaipa\u2019s Coldwater Rumble, which featured five 20-mile loops in the desert. They\u2019ve changed it a bit\u2014it\u2019s now two 60K loops plus a 40K loop\u2014but it\u2019s still nice and loopy.

We do our best to ensure our patterns are accurate and error-free, but sometimes mistakes do happen. Please view updates and corrections below; patterns are in alphabetical order. If you believe you've found an unlisted error in one of our patterns, please email us at loopy@loopymango.com. Thank you for your understanding!

Melissa Breau: Obviously loopy training is kind of a buzzword right now. Everybody has heard it, maybe they don't necessarily know what it is, but they've probably heard it at this point. It's a hot topic. I know it's something you're playing around with and exploring in quite some depth. Do you want to share what it is and why it caught your interest?

Helene Lawler: Sure. The concept I first came across through listening to Alexandra Kurland's podcast, "Equiosity," and Hannah Branigan also talks about it in her podcast, so those episodes got me really curious about it. The term "loopy training" was coined by Alexandra and it comes out of her work. I started to study that because I think she does such fantastically interesting work with horses, and of course Hannah was also applying it to the work that she's doing, and I was watching her results and going, "Wow, I want that too."

I started to really study it, and so what is loopy training? Loopy training is reframing how we think about training from a linear process into a circular process. Typically, many of us who have done any kind of work on learning behavior, we think about the ABCs of training, so antecedent, behavior, consequence, or cue behavior, reinforcement, or "sit," dog sits, click, and then we give them a cookie.

That is a way of thinking about how we can train that will help advance your training skills a lot when you start to dig into this. It makes our training so much more efficient and clear to our dogs, and so we can move things along much more quickly when we start thinking in a circular, in a loopy way instead of in a linear way with our training.

Melissa Breau: You've iterated on the idea, the original idea, and you've started to talk about this new concept, I think you're calling it loopy listening. Do you want to talk about what that is, and how that's different than the concept of loopy training itself?

That's why I call it loopy listening, because our dogs speak through behavior. We have to watch it, but what we have to do is then interpret what we see as communication for our dogs. That's why I use loopy listening as opposed to loopy watching. I can watch my dog perform a behavior and then see what other behaviors are involved in that loop, what is the dog adding to the loop, and how do I interpret that. That is what loopy listening is all about.

I have a definition here that I use to define it. Loopy listening I define as the application of the principles of loopy training, which is what we just talked about, so we learn to hear our dogs whisper before they have to shout.

What loopy listening does, which is why I'm so excited about it, is it's a fairly systematic process. It's an art and a science, but it gives us a step-by-step process for training your eye to watch for those things, to learn how to spot it. It requires practice, it requires a lot of thinking and paying close attention, so I always recommend that people don't try and apply it to all your training all at once, be it loopy training or loopy listening. Just pick one thing and work on it for two minutes and let that soak into your brain for a little while.

Helene Lawler: Absolutely. That was something that came up in my Sensitive Dogs class because several of the working students were really struggling with play. Their dogs didn't want to play. It's not quite loopy training, because they weren't playing in loops, we didn't approach it by trying to set up play in loops, per se. But having the eye honed to the whispers through the loopy listening, they started to see when the dog was whispering in play, telling them they weren't having a good time.

So we need to pay attention to when our dogs are not liking the rules that we've set for play. Learning the whispers that we learned to train our eye to through loopy listening will start to show us, "My dog took two laps of the field with that Frisbee in her mouth before she came back to me. Maybe there's a little bit too much pressure happening here and she's not finding it super-fun," whatever I just did before that happened.

What should people know about the workshop or just about loopy listening n general? Video, video, video, because until your eye is trained, and even then, we can't see the subtleties in real time. We have too much going on in our heads and things happen too quickly, so when you have video of your training and you can watch it. I use the Coach's Eye app, which I love, and I throw my videos into that, and you can backwards and forwards and stop and freeze-frame with your finger on the screen, and draw all over it. It's eight dollars or something like that for the app and it's really worth investing in. There may be other apps, too, that do something similar. Video is your friend. e24fc04721

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