
One-click, it will automatically mix the current list with seamless DJ-style transitions. Advanced auto-mixing including Mix-In/Mix-Out (Cue In/Out) points.

Mix not only audio tracks, but also video (including scratch, reverse, pitch, break on video) and karaoke that takes your mix sessions to the highest level.
The visual waveforms graphics (both zoomable and full song) are generated in real-time based on the parameters (such as beats, tempo, frequency).
Instantly loop a 1, 2, 4, 8 beat segment with a click of a button. seamless beat-aware loop and cue-points functions let you easily remix tracks on the fly.
Output full-screen video mixes includes video transitions and FX to external devices (TV, monitor or projector) while maintaining video mix preview interface on your PC monitor.
Instantly sync two tracks. Track BPM, beat-grids, and key are automatically detected on import and used by the powerful sync engine for beat-matched mixes.

Seamless iTunes integration gives you instant access to all your playlists and music from iTunes, automatically ready to go for your next live DJ performance.

You can reverse play, pitch, scratch, bend, spin, brake, mute, fine-tune cue-points, etc the song just like with a regular vinyl. DJ Mixer Express emulates perfectly.

Apply different effects to your mixes, includes popular effects like Flanger, Echo, Robot Delay, Reverb, Cutoff, Reverse, Tremolo, Beat Waw, Bit Crusher, AutoPan.

Pitch fader with Keylock (master-tempo) function. when enabled, adjusting the pitch of a song does not change the tone of the track.

Increases or decreases the tempo (speed); you can temporarily speed up or slow down the tempo by momentarily right clicking on the slider.

3 equalizer knobs is available for each deck. The low, middle and high spectrum of frequencies can be modified within -14 dB to +14 dB range.

Perceptual automatic gain (volume control) feature matches the gain levels between decks, so your mixes always maintain a consistent volume.

Using the preview (pre-listen) function, you can quickly and easily test whether the selected title fits to the current song and prepare the next song.

Record your live mixes to MP3, WAV (Windows) or AIFF (Mac) formats in realtime. great for share it with the rest of the world.
The road trip is also a geography of the self. You learn things about your traveling companion that no dinner conversation could reveal. You learn whether they reach for the volume knob or the temperature dial first. You learn their theory of rest stops (sprint and go vs. stretch and linger). You learn, most intimately, the shape of their sleep—the way their head tilts against the window, the small sound they make when the sunlight shifts and hits their closed eyelids. These are the coordinates of intimacy, plotted not on a map but on the dashboard’s dusty plastic.
That is the secret of 4.1.2. It is not about getting there. It never was. It is about the long, luminous middle—the stretch of highway where the radio plays nothing but static, and the static sounds, for once, exactly like home. 4.1.2 Road Trip
And then there is the landscape. Not the postcard landscape of national parks and scenic overlooks, but the real landscape: the boarded-up diner whose neon sign still buzzes "EAT" in the afternoon heat; the billboard for a fireworks store two hundred miles away; the sudden, shocking beauty of a creek threading through a cornfield at golden hour. The road trip teaches you that the world is not made of destinations but of margins—the forgotten towns, the rest areas named after dead politicians, the truck stop where the coffee is surprisingly good and the pie is surprisingly bad. The road trip is also a geography of the self
We call it a "road trip" as if the road were the protagonist. But it is not. The road is merely the spine of the story, the long gray binding that holds together the scattered pages of gas stations, diners, motel beds, and rest area maps. The true protagonist is motion itself—the act of leaving, the decision to trade the known geometry of home for the uncertain vectors of highway and horizon. You learn their theory of rest stops (sprint and go vs
There is a specific kind of silence that only exists inside a car at 70 miles per hour, with the landscape bleeding past the window and the radio tuned to static between stations. It is not an empty silence, but a full one—packed with the hum of tires on asphalt, the faint whistle of wind through a cracked window seal, and the rhythmic click of the turn signal that no one remembers to cancel. This is the silence of Section 4.1.2: the road trip as ritual, as reckoning, as reluctant return.
Ready to start make your own mixes?