In the early days of the Qu series digital mixers, sound engineers were often tethered to the physical console. The release of the changed the game, allowing engineers to walk the room, stand in the "sweet spot" of the audience, and adjust faders, EQ, and monitors wirelessly from a tablet.
If you want the authentic, original experience, follow these steps: qu-pad for windows
: It can be downloaded from the official Mixing Station site or via the Windows Store. Windows Desktop Integration (DAW Control) In the early days of the Qu series
| Feature | Qu-pad for Windows | Microsoft OneNote | Notepad++ | Google Keep (Web) | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | | Full | Limited (cache only) | Full | Zero (Web wrapper) | | Mobile Sync | Yes (Android/iOS) | Yes | No | Yes | | Startup Speed | < 1 second | 3-5 seconds | < 0.5 sec | Depends on browser | | Resource Usage | Very Low (25 MB RAM) | High (150+ MB RAM) | Minimal (10 MB) | Medium (Chrome tab) | | Markdown Support | Native | No (requires add-ins) | Yes (with plugin) | No | Windows Desktop Integration (DAW Control) | Feature |
Official versions of Qu-Pad are primarily available for the following platforms:
is a total game-changer. Whether you want the stability of a wired connection, the screen real estate of a Microsoft Surface, or just want to keep your mix controls on your main production laptop, getting Qu-Pad running on Windows is easier than you think.