Apple Music is a streaming service that allows you to listen to over 100 million songs. Its features include the ability to download your favorite tracks and play them offline, lyrics in real time, listening across all your favorite devices, new music personalized just for you, curated playlists from our editors, and much more. All this in addition to exclusive and original content.

That all depends on which offer you choose. (1) Students can choose the Apple Music Student Plan at $5.99 per month. (2) An individual monthly subscription is just$10.99 per month after your free trial. (3) The Apple Music Family Plan, which allows you to share your account with up to five people and gives each member a personal account, is just$16.99 per month. (4) The Apple Music Individual Plan and the Apple Music Family Plan are also included in Apple One, which bundles up to five other Apple services into a single monthly subscription. Apple One plans start at$19.95 per month.


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Students get the same Apple Music features and benefits as individual members. Once your student status with your college or university is verified, you get student membership pricing for up to four years, as long as you remain a student. After four years, your membership will continue at the individual member price.

You can listen to lossless audio using the latest Apple Music app on an iPhone, iPad, Mac, or Apple TV 4K. Turn on lossless audio in Settings > Music > Audio Quality. You can choose between Lossless and Hi-Res Lossless for cellular or Wi-Fi connections. Note that Hi-Res Lossless requires external equipment such as a USB digital to analog converter.

Yes. With an Apple Music Family Plan, up to six people in the family can enjoy all the features and the full catalog of Apple Music. To get started, just set up Family Sharing on your iOS or iPadOS device, Android phone, or Mac and invite family members to join.

Yes, both apps offer the largest classical catalog in the world. However, Apple Music Classical includes multiple additional features, such as classical browse, a search engine designed for classical music, handpicked recommendations, composer and artist bios, and descriptions of the works.

No, Apple Music Classical is classical only, but it does include lots of film and other crossover genres with classical music. Apple Music Classical users can also listen to more than 100 million songs on Apple Music through their subscription.

If I try to load a Channel Strip Setting in the Mixer view, the menu is now completely empty, with all the Logic and Garage Band settings in a "Old Versions" subfolder. After doing some research I found out there are now three locations where settings are saved:

Is there any documentation about these folders and how they're used by Logic? Is it save to move my content to the "Audio Music Apps" folder, so that my settings appear at the top level menu again? Is it save to delete folders 1 and 2?

Folder 2. and 3. are technically the same folder. They are pointing to the same files/folder on the hard drive. Try this: have bothe windows open and move a file into the Patches folder in one window. It will appear also on the other folder. Move a file into the Drummer folder. It will appear in the other folder too.

Everything you do in LPX, GarageBand X and MainStage happens in the same "Audio Music Apps". They all access now the same folder. This makes file management so much easier for the three apps because they don't need their separate Library directory anymore.

I explain that ned concept throughout in great details throughout my manual "Logic Pro X - How it Works". Here is just a screenshot from the Library chapter that discusses all those different settings files (Patch, Channel Strip Settings, Plugin Settings, EXS Instrument)

Thank you for your reply. Unfortunately the Co-Location you described is not working for my installation. If I copy or move files in one folder, it doesn't keep synced with the other. Also, all the contents from the System-Library only appears within the "old versions" menu within logic (e.g. if I select a Channel Strip Setting).

The people who is developing right now apps. Which language are using ? just Swift ? Any library ? 

How can i start developing music apps for iOS ? there's a forum for it ? (more than stackoverflow) haha

It's the "wrapped in Swift" portion that I can't figure out how to bypass. I'm okay with C, and could probably figure C++ but it seems I need to get a Mac or is there any way I can bypass that as a Windows user?

XCode and Swift look good to me, with the understanding that I may need to dive into some C++ for performance-critical tasks. I plan to buy a MacBook Pro and start that journey. I do have to say that the examples and tutorials on the XCode site do make it look like a ton of time can be saved with that approach.

I'd strongly suggest that you do use a library, though. Apple's documentation has been getting worse and worse with each new version of Xcode. The current documentation of the audio frameworks is now poor at best and non-existent at worst. It can literally be a case of watching WWDC videos for some hints and trying to figure it out from there...

Scripting doesn't really save a lot of time if your goal is a competitive app. It's good however to learn to master the basics of programming structures and data management while reducing the demands of user interface designs.

Yes, but few people know that he had practiced pulled things out of his ass for more than 10,000 hours previously. By then he was an expert at it. We cannot really question the number until we've done the same.

It's really just a sign post... this way to expertise: 10,000 hours. Sure some people become experts just by talking ore crap and the crowd likes their attention to keeping the "others"

in cages... or worse.

How many works per day on average over how many days have you invested in this unstated achievement? I do recognize your expertise in multiple areas so I'm not trying to

insult your abilities. But you did the work, right?

Can yo imagine someone making a competitive app from the day they ask for language/platform advice to be anything less than 3 years at best? Matt's AudioKit adventure

is probably the best model... and he joined a movement and got a lot of help developing his

skills from master programmers. This really the best approach... pick a community to work within. AudioKit's OpenSource approach provides the bets environment for me but I could see using Juce being great if you have visions of multiple platform expertise.

The Audio Damage duo just writes their own multiplatform GUI's in C and shares the code base between Mac and IOS apps. But if they had the chance to know what they know now would they do that or have better GUI's on IOS exclusively? Too late and they made it this far.

I totally agree with you that it's unrealistic to think of developing iOS apps from ground zero without many hundreds or thousands of hours of investment in learning and actual development time. I have 30+ years of computer experience and exposure to (light) levels of programming. Even so, I'll be pretty satisfied with myself if I can put together a decent modest iOS music app in under a year from where I'm starting at just this week.

why? why is this here? (in Users>Music). it's a dupe of the folder in the User Library (App Support>Logic). i thought it might be an alias to that, but...no. a dupe. so i have two folders, both around half-a-gig, that are identical. 2 sets of custom sampler instruments, audio files...

After installing LPX, I noticed the folder Audio Music Apps, and said "Ah hell no!" and deleted it. This ended up deleting the folders from the both Library/Application Support/Logic folders. Used Time Machine to restore the Audio Music Apps folder with all content it used to contain and all is good.

But now what's in that folder is no longer reflected in the Library/Application Support/Logic folders. For example, all of my EXS instruments aren't found in the Library, but I can still access them within Logic from the Audio Music Apps folder.

Thanks for your reply. I don't think I want to try making aliases. As I mentioned, LPX currently sees all of my ESX instruments that are located in the Audio Music Apps folder, even though they are not visible in the user Library. According to the manual, this should not be the case as only material in the Library, or material with an alias in the Library, should be seen by Logic. My guess is, Logic treats the Audio Music Apps folder as an extension of the user Library whether or not you see those folders within the Library. But I'm just guessing, because I see no documentation on this. 152ee80cbc

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