Independent developer Valentin Radu has announced the release of Silvertune, the iPhone and iPod touch instrument tuner. Featuring a new, modern, pitch detection algorithm, Silvertune supports a wide range of woodwind, brass and bowed string instruments. Accurate to 1/100 of a semitone, the tuner is ready for professional use.
Silvertune aims to be easy to use, reliable, beautiful to look at and most important of all, accurate. "When I started to develop Silvertune, I knew from my previous experience with professional musicians, that it would have to be very accurate to fulfill their expectations. That's why I didn't use any of the traditional pitch detection algorithms" said Valentin.
The tuner has all the basic functionality included, but lacks some of the features other AppStore tuners have. "In my opinion, there are 3 major things that define a good tuner. It has to be accurate, it has to be easy to read and it has to be responsive and reliable. I focused my development efforts on those 3 things, leaving aside other less important features. Even so, Silvertune still offers basic options like, an adjustable A4 frequency or solfege notation", he explained.
"Of course, I know there's always room for improvement, so, I'm committed to continue the development with a series of updates" he concluded.
Features: * highly accurate * friendly, easy to use interface * no bells and whistles * wide range of pitch detection (from A0 to A8) * adjustable A4 frequency (from 410Hz to 450Hz) * one tap calibration * solfege or scientific notation * flat or sharp notation
Pricing and Availability: Silvertune 1.0 is $2.99 USD, available worldwide through App Store.
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I'm a bassist, I've just tried this app and seems to work better than Cleartune for me. As advertised, it really goes down to A0 and it keeps the same "resolution" over the entire scale. Cleartune fails to do so.
Really? Thank you for sharing this. Until today Cleartune never missed or get wrong any note, but if you say that this another app can be better, let's try it!
Actually, you can feel the difference only on low notes, otherwise, they are pretty much the same. Cleartune works great, but when the note is low, it somehow jumps in big steps, no matter how small the actual difference is.