Tunity

Tunity

Scan any TV and hear it on your phone

9 followers

Tunity is a free app that allows users to sync their mobile devices with low volume and/or silent TVs in order to live stream the audio directly to their phones!
Tunity gallery image
Tunity gallery image
Tunity gallery image
Tunity gallery image
Tunity gallery image
Launch tags:AndroidiOSHealth & Fitness
Launch Team
AssemblyAI
AssemblyAI
Build voice AI apps with a single API
Promoted

What do you think? …

Ryan Hoover
Really clever. This would be a great companion at the gym to listen to muted TV's in front of rows of elliptical machines.
Yair Kivaiko
Love this! Wondering if they are planning to expend to more channels and countries
yaniv davidson
@kobaiko Yair, we are working on it. we have 40 channels today and plan on adding 10-12 tomorrow morning. You can see the updated list in the app: '?' -> Supported Channels...you can also ask us to add channels
Yair Kivaiko
@yanivdav Tnx for the answer mate! Would love to see Israeli channels (I have Idan+ :))
yaniv davidson
@kobaiko sorry for the late reply. I hear you re Israeli channels. WOuld love to connect and get any other thoughts re the product...
Ben Lang
Brilliant, love to hear about the technology behind this.
yaniv davidson
@benln Thanks ben - happy to connet...
Ben Lang
@dkapchino 2014-YB35
This could come in really handy with Muted TVs at airports or sports bars. This is also makes a lot of sense when you're watching TV late at night and you don't want to wake anyone up. Great Idea.
Laurence Moore
slap these guys on the back. awesome product!
Kevin Henry
Just tried this and it's works perfectly. Love the clever ability to manually sync the audio with the broadcast avoiding the weird lip sync effect.
I've been testing Tunity for a bit and thought it was so cool that I put a calendar reminder to post it on @producthunt today, but apparently I'm a day late to the party (you all are quick!). One thing I found surprising was that Tunity was able to capture mindshare for what is for me an infrequent behavior. @jasonlbaptiste talks about every app getting one "verb". For Tunity, that verb is to "hear" a muted TV, which is not a daily activity. However, Tunity does such a surprisingly good job that the next time I need to hear a muted TV, I immediately open it up, even if it's a month later. It's hard to imagine deleting this app, and the tech is more than sufficiently good -- it's surprisingly excellent, which I suspect matters when you may only get to surprise and delight people infrequently. To me, this is a good example where the MVP needs to be fairly built out. Perhaps viability = delight * frequency. The less frequent, the more delightful/memorable the user experience needs to be in order to reasonably test user behavior.
yaniv davidson
@producthunt @jasonlbaptiste @MattHartman Matt, I think you captured the biggest dilemma we had - perfectly. It was a constant tension for us between the "go out fast - get the input" and "get the input on the right product/experience". I hope we waited enough. One more aspect to it though, is - the more users scan -> the more data we have and we leverage that data EVERY DAY to improve the algorithms for detection and synchronization.
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