If you have an iOS audio or MIDI interface that came with an iOS app, odds are that it can use Audiobus to send the audio from that app into another app running on the same iOS device. Now the Audiobus development team has released a new iOS app, called Audiobus Remote, which uses Bluetooth and iBeacon to send your audio to a second iOS device.
Along with control capacities, Audiobus Remote allows for creating custom Remote Triggers, in which a specific app controls what will appear on the second display. These Remote Triggers give you the ability, for instance, to record loops in Loopy HD, trigger drum samples in DM-1, adjust effects in the Holderness Media apps, play a mini version of SoundPrism Electro, and more.
Audiobus Remote is supported out of the box by all 700 apps that currently support Audiobus. Audiobus Remote requires iOS 8.3 and an iOS device that’s compatible with Bluetooth Low Energy: iPad 3, iPad Mini, iPhone 4s, iPod Touch 5th gen, and newer devices. And of course to input any audio or MIDI data you’ll need an iOS-compatible iOS audio/MIDI interface on one, if not both, of your iDevices.