Not relevant to the piano side of things, but I found Melodics very useful in getting up to speed with the mechanics of getting your fingers moving around properly. Also great at getting you to practice everyday. Though it only works off MIDI, which I'm guessing won't work for you.
On the more piano-focused side of things, I used FlowKey for a bit. But with it only having options for pause the music at each note, play at 50% speed or play at 75% I found each jump pretty jarring. So I rarely use it. Does work with acoustic pianos though (via your devices mic)
Very much depends on what you're looking to learn, maybe pick up a book for the style you're looking for? Hal Leonard have some decent books (and some online books which I've found easier to use, though you might find the opposite if you're looking for something to pop on a piano's music stand).
And of course the predictable, boring and probably best answer, go get lessons from a teacher.
Not relevant to the piano side of things, but I found Melodics very useful in getting up to speed with the mechanics of getting your fingers moving around properly. Also great at getting you to practice everyday. Though it only works off MIDI, which I'm guessing won't work for you.
On the more piano-focused side of things, I used FlowKey for a bit. But with it only having options for pause the music at each note, play at 50% speed or play at 75% I found each jump pretty jarring. So I rarely use it. Does work with acoustic pianos though (via your devices mic)
Very much depends on what you're looking to learn, maybe pick up a book for the style you're looking for? Hal Leonard have some decent books (and some online books which I've found easier to use, though you might find the opposite if you're looking for something to pop on a piano's music stand).
And of course the predictable, boring and probably best answer, go get lessons from a teacher.