Is there a version of this software for android? Thank You
No. Android still isn’t good enough in processing low latency audio.
other virtual amps i.e. deplike work fine on android. I would love to see a version of midi to guitar on Android.
Yes, but you can include in MG2 a Deep fx + virtual amp + synth + 4 fx + possibly a cabinet and a reverb.
I do not know about Android, but in Windows my CPU usage for a single virtual amp is multiplied by 6 for MG2 when using the possibilities offered.
You also need to think about RAM allocation and storage capacity.
Some instruments in MG2 easily use 1 or 2 GB of RAM and over a hundred GB for their libraries.
Sure PC are more powerful. However tablets and phones are catching up. There are a few like rockchip that have 8 core 2.1ghz CPUs.
Even if there’s a limit to the effects chain midi to guitar 2 is far superior to any virtual amp I’ve used with my guitar. I’d pay for a trimmed down version. All I really use are the instruments, a couple of effects and the tuner.
P.s. isn’t. there an IPhone version?
Yes I thought so.
My point - If it can be developed for the IPhone then Android should be way easier.
I guess I can hope it happens one day.
I’m thinking of the benefits not using a phone but an Android box. I have several high end ones and use them as mini computers, and not only for watching videos.
No, audio latency makes Android horrible for developers and most pro audio use:
Please see:
https://juce.com/maq
Unfortunate, i could live without virtual synths just guitar to MIDI
Android is still bad in realtime audio, but Linux would be possible. Maybe that’s why there will probably be a slimmed-down Linux version of @JamO at some point in the future, which could then also be used for Raspberry
A Raspberry with “MG3 mini” could then - connected to an OTG adapter / bluetooth - send Midi data in real time to an Android phone as shown here in the video:
According to current technical standards, the Rasperry 5 together with suitable very low latency audio and midi interfaces like PiSound (from Blokas) and free guitar effects software like MODEP (Guitrarix) could then be operated for about 4-5 hours with 6 lithium batteries of 3500 mWh.
And so you could build a foot pedal that could possibly even communicate wirelessly with the Android phone via Bluetooth.
And if the Raspberry or the Android phone also streams audio directly to an audio amplifier via Bluetooth, we would have a perfect little “wireless MG3” Possibly the easiest first project could be in MG3 vanilla…