
New Website is Live!

Version 1.0.4 features a lovely new MUTE button, allowing you to temporarily mute your own audio without having to change your audio device to “no audio”, as you did previously.
This version also adds an advanced port forwarding setting that allows users to choose specific ports for FarPlay to use for its communications. This is useful in situations where a user is behind a particularly restrictive firewall.
Lastly, this version fixes an issue that affected FarPlay video on Fedora Linux.
Enjoy!
This intermediate update brings important improvements both in front of and behind the scenes:
Today we announce FarPlay 1.0, our first non-beta release, featuring built-in video, multi-user sessions, multi-track recording, and multi-channel broadcast output. We’ve been working hard to make this major step forward, and we look forward to seeing what you make with it!
A complete list of new features follows:
Download FarPlay 1.0.2 free here.
For International Make Music Day, on June 21st, Dan Tepfer played live with musicians all over the world, from Australia to the US via Japan and Europe, using ultra-low-latency audio app FarPlay. An 11-hour musical marathon featuring Jo Lawry, Sophia Bacelar, Jelena Kuljic, Kristin Berardi, Michael Janisch, Sam Anning, Seigo Matsunaga, Paul Brody, Massimo Biolcati, Noah Preminger and others. Featuring brand-new FarPlay features such as multi-user sessions and multichannel Broadcast Output.
FarPlay co-creator Dan Tepfer did some free improvising with bassist Seigo Matsunaga over FarPlay. Seigo was in Kyushu, Japan, 6800 miles (11000km) away from Dan in Brooklyn. Even with latency around 80ms, they had a blast playing together.
Dan Tepfer, in Brooklyn, played w/ French pianist Thomas Enhco, in Paris, on his livestream last Monday, and with latencies around 45ms, they were able to make real music together!
FarPlay version 0.3.7 is out today, with the following improvements:
Grammy-nominated saxophonist and composer Remy LeBoeuf lives less than a mile away from me in Brooklyn, and we were able to play together through FarPlay with absolutely no perceptible latency, even in highly demanding rhythmic music. A super fun session.
3900 miles is an extreme distance for low-latency audio, but with strong internet connections at both ends, vocalist Kristin Berardi and I were able to get our latency down to about 50ms using FarPlay (equivalent to playing with someone 50ft away from you if the sound is traveling through air), and make some real music together. The longest distance I’ve ever tried — and it worked!