1.3.0 is out
You can now use USB-C as an input source for sampling on Move. This allows you to sample the audio from a connected computer, smartphone, or tablet. For example, you can play a song on your phone and record the audio into a drum pad on Move. Or, you can play a synth on your tablet and record the audio into the Melodic Sampler.
To sample audio from a device, it must be connected to Move via its USB-C port. Devices with USB-C ports typically work with a USB-C cable alone, while phones or tablets with a Lightning port require an adapter and must also be connected to a charger when sampling. You can read more about this in this Knowledge Base Article
Other Improvements
- You can now solo tracks by pressing and holding the Shift and Mute buttons simultaneously and then pressing a track button.
- Longer entries in the browser, such as sample or preset names, now scroll on the display so that the full name is visible.
- When used as an audio interface, Move now defaults to outputting its internal microphone and line-in. Move’s main output can still be selected in Setup however, doing so will disable Move’s speaker when a USB-C cable is connected
- Move now sends out polyphonic aftertouch when set to MIDI Out, which lets you play expressively when using external MIDI controllers.
- A wider selection of presets is now used when creating a new Set.
- Uploads to Ableton Cloud are now faster.
- Triggered one shot samples and long release note phases now stop when playback stops and when clips are retriggered. Additionally, an “All Sound Off” MIDI message (CC 120) is sent to the MIDI output.