

Each click of a button brings up a new advertisement, which makes it quite frustrating to use. Navigating the app is also quite difficult with the incessant amount of ads.

There’s also no way to save your final output or even half of your progress for you to go back to later. You also can’t record audio from within the app if you want to add your own voice or instruments. Unfortunately, however, the lack of labels for the different buttons and controls makes it difficult to figure out what each one does unless you play around with it yourself. Since these are separated into two sections, you can edit each audio file individually without accidentally messing with the other one and ruining all your progress. The interface displays two separate turntables dedicated to the tracks plan on using. The interface is detailed with lots of small buttons that simply aren't ideal for netbook monitors.For beginners, DJ Mixer Player Mobile is a great tool for creating simple tracks that blend two of your favorite songs together. despite its name, DJ ProMixer NB Netbook doesn't look great on a small screen. There are plenty of functions, and a switch to activate well mapped keyboard controls. BPMs are automatically calculated, and generally quite good.

Once you've found your music, loading tracks into the mixing desk is simple. Searching through your Windows folder tree is a pain. The explorer isn't great - Traktor's system of allowing you to open your iTunes library is much simpler, for example. Under the mixing desk is the library, split into DJ ProMixer NB Netbook saved playlists, and an explorer for your Netbook's hard drives. It offers a two-deck mixing interface, with a central mixer, effects and sampler console. DJ ProMixer NB Netbook is designed to be lightweight enough to run smoothly on netbooks, and it does seem to be fairly light on resources. There are lots of mixing apps for budding DJs, from high end programs like Traktor Pro and Virtual DJ to the open source Mixxx and other free options like CrossDJ. Does DJ ProMixer stand out from the crowd?
