As for using this for Spotify. Its a joke! Nothing you cant already IN THE SPOTIFY APP ITSELF ! Waste money.
As for using this for Spotify. Its a joke! Nothing you cant already IN THE SPOTIFY APP ITSELF ! Waste money.
Looks good, works well with an easy to navigate interface. Switches easily among files of differing formats. Good choice to pair with an external DAC for vivid sonics!
This app is still great without YouTube. I understand the problem and they are trying to fix it. It is like Spotify and iTunes and SoundCloud in one app. I highly recommend. Clean and nice app :)
I was good when youtube was in it .
Its sorta like apple music but night mode. Its also way better. Soundcloud integration is incredible.
I hope itll come back.
Difficult dealing with support, payment issue. VOX Team=0-stars; Coppertino=0-stars; FastSpring=0-stars; Amazon Pay=5-stars (yeah, Amazon). Avoid VOX subscriptions.
Much better than stock music app, higly recomended :D
Great app, but please update it to make it iOS Universal so that it has a native interface for the iPad. Even though I can still play it on the iPad downloading it as an iPhone app, it would be nice if an iPad interface existed, as we would be able to see more tracks on the queue. Also please consider allowing the creation of folders for our favorite radio stations, so we can group them by genre, news, etc. (similar how you have it in the Discover section. Thanks!
I always hated how the Apple player for iTunes would just keep playing even after an album was done. This player works well and has nice EQs as well.
Ive tried multiple alternative music players for iOS and OS X/macOS. Vox is nothing special from my perspective. Its not a horrible app, but it is lacking in areas. Theres only so much that software can do with audio on iOS, and sometimes you get lucky (more often with audio creation apps and the like), and sometime you dont. I feel that Coppertino could have done more for audio playback on iOS than what they did with Vox. Pros: Nice UI (except for EQ) and the gestures for navigating through the app arent hard to figure out. Cons: 1.) The custom EQ options are too limited and clumbsy. I tried this with both my Audeze EL-8 Titanium (Lighning + 24-bit DAC) headphones, and with my more portable Sennheiser Momentum headphones (using the analog to lightning dongle), and I would have appreciated more flexibility than what this app offers. Sometimes I need to shape the audio from certain sources, but I generally like playing my music using a "flat" or plain "off" setting, and even those did not sound too good with Vox. Using the standard Music app with EQ off or flat for 48k/24-bit ALAC sounds good enough with a great amount of detail when factoring in the hardware capabilities of iOS devices. 2.) Vox offers minimal integration with third-party music and cloud storage serices. Vox offering its Loop service might be nice if I wanted to pay as much to use it as I already do for my Dropbox and iCloud storage combined. Offering integration with Dropbox, iCloud Drive, and so on would be nice and is standard with many other apps that make use of accesing files from a cloud service. Additionally, I have a lot of purchased music as FLAC available via Bandcamp, and that would be a cool integration if they wanted to bring that to this app. I do not need to pay for yet another cloud storage option. And, I do not use Spotify and I do not stream from SoundCloud too often. I doubt I am alone with all of this, but I knew what I was getting into when I gave Vox a try on my iOS devices and Mac. I still consider its lack of useful cloud integration and streaming options a con as it appears Coppertino offers only what it can make money on - go capitalism. 3.) The time it takes for Vox to update its library of local files is inconsistent if not slow. If I put one or more multi-gigabyte FLACs and 48k/24-bit ALACs on my iPhone, and launch Vox, some may show right away, while others may take a decent amount of time to show up in Vox if not after quitting and launching Vox again. I was not necessarily prevented from playing the tracks on my device using Vox, but the Music app again did just fine when it came to the ALAC and I didnt have to wait before music playback began. So, Vox is not a bad app, its just not as useful as I had hoped. I can convert FLAC to ALAC or just export to ALAC using any number of free tools and paid apps I work with for music editing and production, and the Music app does a good job playing back 48k/24-bit ALAC if you have the cans to handle it. If youre a diehard fan of FLAC that wants nothing more than a music app with a simple EQ wrapped up in a nice UI looking to pay a good amount of money for proprietary cloud storage, then Vox makes for a good choice. Otherwise, save your money.
It is totally worth its money!
Loop I s only cloud service to keep up tracks without any limits so it could to be your whole lossless collection with direct desktop and mobile access to listening for reasonable price.
It a really good program !!!!!! All must tested it .
Crash on ios 10.3.1 Music list is only availabe in sort by recently added and cant be showed in other options I love this player so much but If you add an option to share locally stored mp3s to other apps it would be perfect
No words, just emotions
Perfect sound quality, and ability to stream lossless music, what else would one need? I use it every day both on a Mac and iPhone. Wish the library views were more compact for scrolling.
Seems so stable and clean in sound that I cannot stop finding deeper nuances in the music I listened to for years. Please full - sized iPad version!
Dont forget to add the YouTube search option back.
if it would only work! Version 2.1.9 crashes on iOS 8.1