
Back in 1999, the idea of mixing digital tracks on turntables sounded impossible โ until Final Scratch arrived.
Developed by N2IT (with Richie Hawtin & John Acquaviva), Final Scratch was the first system to let DJs control digital audio files using vinyl.
The round aluminum โScratchAmpโ connected turntables to a computer โ the birth of Digital Vinyl Systems (DVS).
๐ฟ That was the moment the future of DJing began.
โ๏ธ The Traktor Partnership (2001โ2002)
When Native Instruments joined forces with Stanton and N2IT, they created Traktor Final Scratch โ a Linux-based system booted from an ISOLINUX CD.
It merged hardware and software like never before.
For the first time, DJs could manipulate MP3s exactly like records โ pitch, scratch, cue, everything.
That collaboration laid the foundation for Traktor Pro, still one of the most reliable DJ platforms ever built.
๐ง The Legacy
Final Scratch didnโt just innovate โ it transformed DJ culture.
โ From crates to USB drives
โ From vinyl to waveforms
โ From manual beatmatching to creative remixing
Traktor became the digital backbone of thousands of performances, balancing power with precision.
โก The Challenge of Evolution

Today, Traktor remains legendary โ but slower to evolve.
New technologies like stems, streaming, and AI tools move fast, while Traktor focuses on stability and sound quality.
Still, many pros agree:
โTraktor might not be first โ but when it arrives, itโs flawless.โ
๐๏ธ Quick Timeline
Year Milestone
1998 Final Scratch prototype (N2IT)
1999 Final Scratch 1.0 released (Linux/BeOS)
2001 Traktor Final Scratch (ISOLINUX CD)
2003 Traktor FS2 (Windows/macOS)
2005โ2010 Traktor Pro becomes industry standard
2020+ Slow adoption of new tech like stems
๐ง Final Scratch changed everything. It turned technology into a creative partner โ not a replacement.
โWithout Final Scratch, there would be no Traktor, Serato, or Rekordbox.โ







