Open Ear vs Tuner
Side-by-side comparison of two open source alternatives
Open Ear
OpenEar is an open source ear training app for musicians. It's goal is to provide a flexible variety of exercises so musicians will be able to master recognizing any musical pattern that might help them become better musicians. Currently includes the following built in exercises: 1. Identify interval 2. Identify note in a tonal context 3. Identify chord & chord progressions in a tonal context 4. Identify a triad chord inversion in close position
Tuner
Accordion tuner with scope, spectrum and strobe or staff. Can show up to eight different notes or reeds concurrently. In portrait the app shows a scope with the input signal, a spectrum showing the processed signal, the main display with the note value, cents error, frequency error etc, a strobe or staff display and a meter display showing the cents error. In landscape the app shows just the main display or staff and the meter. There is a signal indicator in the action bar which is useful in landscape mode. * 32 temperaments including Equal, Just, Pythagorean, Meantone * Filter options, including low pass, fundamental, note and octave filter * Optional strobe or musical staff display * Custom temperaments option * Transposition option * Solfège (DoRéMi) option
| Feature | Open Ear | Tuner |
|---|---|---|
| License | MIT | GPL-3.0-only |
| Install sources | F-DroidGitHub | F-DroidGitHub |
| Categories | MusicProductivity | MusicProductivityMedia PlayerVideo |
| Features | Ad-FreeOpen SourceNo Tracking | Ad-FreeOpen SourceNo Tracking |
| Platforms | Android | Android |
| Website | ||
| Source code |