Topic: Any chance for Pianoteq 9 on Android?

First, I would like to congratulate the Pianoteq team for this great release, it is a beautiful work.

I just wonder if you guys have any plan to make Pianoteq to work in an Android system. I would appreciate a lot

Last edited by Beco (19-10-2025 20:14)

Re: Any chance for Pianoteq 9 on Android?

Beco wrote:

First, I would like to congratulate the Pianoteq team for this great release, it is a beautiful work.

I just wonder if you guys have any plan to make Pianoteq to work in an Android system. I would appreciate a lot

Unfortunately, there is simply too much latency with the Android system for it to work in my opinion.

Re: Any chance for Pianoteq 9 on Android?

Kengrayfield wrote:
Beco wrote:

First, I would like to congratulate the Pianoteq team for this great release, it is a beautiful work.

I just wonder if you guys have any plan to make Pianoteq to work in an Android system. I would appreciate a lot

Unfortunately, there is simply too much latency with the Android system for it to work in my opinion.

I think, in addition to latency, there are too many different models of Android phones, which would make support a headache.

Re: Any chance for Pianoteq 9 on Android?

marcos daniel wrote:

I think, in addition to latency, there are too many different models of Android phones, which would make support a headache.

I regularly use sample-based virtual instrument on Android. While some are not that good and do have latency, many other work just fine. So no, latency is not an issue. The "too many Android models" could be an issue if the vendor makes a claim such as "will work perfectly with any Android version and phone/tablet model " which nobody is asking them to do. Modartt has a wonderful try-before-you-buy approach which can be extended to Android (should they decide to release their code on that platform) and I'll bet it'll work just fine in most models, and for the few really-low-tier where it doesn't people will know it from the demo and can't complain.

So no, these answers are just your speculation and frankly incorrect, in my humble opinion.

I think the real answer is that Modartt is a small company with limited resources. Should they decide to release an Android version, they will largely need to re-write most of the code and certainly all of the GUI. That's no small feat that will require substantial investment. The investment will be justified only if they can get a return on such investment. In my (limited) experience, Android's people are not particularly expense-prone, so I doubt Modartt will gain substantially more sales from the Android version as they (might be) getting from the iOS version. I speculate that if Modartt releases an Android version, most of the users of the platform will be existing customers who will (very happily) use another free activation slots on a more convenient device. I for one would be such a person. Therefore, Modartt will not make enough back of their investment. They could ask a minimal sum (say $100) for the Android slot, rather than giving it "included for free" like the other ones, but I think at that point most people would buy an old iOS device with that money instead.

If my speculation is anywhere close to Modartt market analysis of the situation, then unfortunately we won't see an Android version.

Where do I find a list of all posts I upvoted? :(

Re: Any chance for Pianoteq 9 on Android?

dv wrote:
marcos daniel wrote:

I think, in addition to latency, there are too many different models of Android phones, which would make support a headache.

I regularly use sample-based virtual instrument on Android. While some are not that good and do have latency, many other work just fine. So no, latency is not an issue. The "too many Android models" could be an issue if the vendor makes a claim such as "will work perfectly with any Android version and phone/tablet model " which nobody is asking them to do. Modartt has a wonderful try-before-you-buy approach which can be extended to Android (should they decide to release their code on that platform) and I'll bet it'll work just fine in most models, and for the few really-low-tier where it doesn't people will know it from the demo and can't complain.

So no, these answers are just your speculation and frankly incorrect, in my humble opinion.

I think the real answer is that Modartt is a small company with limited resources. Should they decide to release an Android version, they will largely need to re-write most of the code and certainly all of the GUI. That's no small feat that will require substantial investment. The investment will be justified only if they can get a return on such investment. In my (limited) experience, Android's people are not particularly expense-prone, so I doubt Modartt will gain substantially more sales from the Android version as they (might be) getting from the iOS version. I speculate that if Modartt releases an Android version, most of the users of the platform will be existing customers who will (very happily) use another free activation slots on a more convenient device. I for one would be such a person. Therefore, Modartt will not make enough back of their investment. They could ask a minimal sum (say $100) for the Android slot, rather than giving it "included for free" like the other ones, but I think at that point most people would buy an old iOS device with that money instead.

If my speculation is anywhere close to Modartt market analysis of the situation, then unfortunately we won't see an Android version.

I don't know how much code they need to re write, I've run Linux/ARM version of PT on a Samsung S8+ a copule of years ago, but  could not configure the outputs. I don't remeber the details, I think I posted it here on some thread.
If you already use sampled instruments on Android, just try PT, may be it already works.