Tunatic Questions & Answers
Table of contents
To run Tunatic, you need:
- A PC running Windows 2000, XP or better
or A macintosh running Mac OS X v10.2 or better
- Internet access
- A microphone plugged to your computer. Alternatively, you can plug your
sound source directly to your computer.
- Many Macintosh models (and some PCs) have a built-in microphone. Check in
System Preferences/Sound/input.
- You can get a microphone for less than $10 in almost any computer store.
If your computer doesn't have any sound input, you may need a USB sound input
as well (such as Griffin's
iMic).
- You can probably plug your sound source (e.g. radio) directly to your computer,
through an inexpensive audio cable. Tunatic will work even better, since there
will be no quality loss in the signal.
- Tunatic can be used to identify songs played by your computer (from, say,
an Internet radio) -- without any microphone. See next question.
- On the Macintosh, this can be achieved using software such as SoundFlower
or Jack OS X. Both of
them are free!
- Most PC sound cards allow you to select "What You Hear" (also named "Stereo
Mix" or "Mixed Output") as input. To get there, right-click Tunatic's window,
select "preferences", then click the "Configure..." button.
- If your hardware allows it, plug your sound output to your sound input.
It's ugly, but it works!
Tunatic can identify music from any genre except classical.
Tunatic can only identify songs that were indexed into its database, which is
kept up-to-date by the community of Tunatic users through a program called Tunalyzer.
If you like a particular genre or artist and feel concerned about its being
identifyable through Tunatic, use Tunalyzer to contribute to the Tunatic database
(it's easy and effortless).
Currently, no. Tunatic can only identify recorded music. Indeed, when Tunatic
analyzes a song, it takes its timbre, not only its melody, into account. On
the other hand, this selectivity allows Tunatic to discriminate between different
versions or mixes of the same song.
Songtapper.com features
song search by tapping: this may be what you need.
You're looking for MusicBrainz.
As their site says, you can use the MusicBrainz Tagger to automatically identify
and clean up the metadata tags in your MP3 collections. MusicBrainz is free
and avaialble for Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X.
This could mean two things:
- Your corporate firewall blocks any traffic to the Tunatic server. Please
ask your system administrator to allow traffic to ports 5747 and 5748.
- The Tunatic server is temporarily down for maintenance. Try again later.
We're sorry for the inconvenience.
Unfortunately, no. Proxy servers are designed to filter or cache HTTP traffic
(HTTP is the protocol used by web browsers). But Tunatic's communication needs
are very different from those of a web browser, so it uses its own optimized
protocol to connect to its server.
This means your computer does not have any sound input. In order to use Tunatic,
you need to plug a microphone to your computer. See also this
topic.
This means Tunatic does not hear the music loud enough. Check the following:
- Have you plugged your microphone to your computer?
- Is it pointing to the right direction?
- If you have several sound inputs, have you selected the proper input in
Tunatic's Settings/Preferences window?
- Is the sound input volume set to maximum?
 |
 |
| signal too weak |
signal OK |
This bug will be corrected in a future version.
- Try playing the music louder or bring the microphone closer to the music
source.
- Try not to interfere with the music.
- Unfortunately, Tunatic can only identify the music it knows. But through
Tunalyzer,
you have the power to make it better.