In this release, color tagging is super-clear, highlighting the tracks in the browser: Color tagging in the track browser: A lot of DJs use a tagging system for their tracks, and color-tagging regularly comes up as a popular way to quickly tell song energy, type, time-of-gig to play, etc.A new default theme/skin: instead of the older “Deere” skin, Mixxx’s latest version defaults to a massively revamped LateNight skin – it looks a lot some of the best elements of the Serato DJ and Virtual DJ default skins with a bit more of an orange accent to it. Many of these features have been brewing over the last two years in beta (with a “total of 7477 changes over 1 million lines of code were modified” since the 2.2.4 release), but now they’re officially released: Mixxx’s new default look So let’s take a quick look at what Mixxx has added in this 2.3.0 version, available now on MacOS, Windows, and Linux. While we’ve covered Mixxx many times in the past on DJTT, it sometimes goes under DJ’s radar – the team behind doesn’t have massive marketing wings, fancy PR companies, or anything like that. Mixxx – which is a totally free, open-source, cross-platofrm DJing software – has gone through a big push over the last year to get it to a new release, 2.3.0. One of the most valuable free tools out there for DJs often goes undiscussed.
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