Yuval Kaminka was faced with a difficult choice. The Israeli entrepreneur had built a successful music learning app called JoyTunes, and he found that it was particularly beloved by professional music ...
Today at the LAUNCH Education Conference in Mountain View, an Israeli startup named JoyTunes showed off the work its been doing in an exciting and active space: Instrument-activated video games.
JoyTunes creates apps that allow people to teach themselves to play music but they've also become a favorite of many teachers who encourage their students to use the apps to support practicing. Their ...
Founded in 2010, Israeli startup JoyTunes has been on a mission to become the Rosetta Stone of music — to help those looking to learn play an instrument do so by turning practice into a mobile game, ...
JoyTunes, which has developed an app for learning musical instruments, is raising $50 million led by Google Ventures (GV) and with the participation of new investors Qualcomm Ventures and Hearst ...
One startup has come to dominate the world of music-learning apps. “The trick is getting through that initial three-year phase where there’s no payoff, where you’re practicing but no one wants to hear ...
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Every once in a while we get wind of an application that, while it might not be our typical forte, is just pretty cool. JoyTunes is exactly one of those applications. It’s a music-learning suite, for ...
JoyTunes, a startup that makes apps that teach people to play music, has become a unicorn, the Calcalist financial website said Monday, after the Tel Aviv-based firm raised $50 million at a $1 billion ...