About this tool
We reference it when the article context is less about ownership and more about comparing recognizable songs already living online.
Fits lightweight browser listening, especially in Chromium-based setups.
Why we cover it
This tool appears in our editorial coverage because it addresses a recurring need our readers describe: a way to verify, compare, or work with audio in a controlled way. We include it because it does the job, not because of any single campaign.
Articles referencing this tool
The Headphones That Kept Showing Up in Sound Threads
A field-note piece about the recurring role of headphones and playback gear in frequency-listening conversations.
440 Hz vs 432 Hz: What Actually Changes?
A practical comparison of what changes, what does not, and how readers should think about the difference.
I Thought 432 Hz Was a Gimmick Until I Tested It Myself
A skeptical-first advertorial story about moving from random uploads to a controlled listening test.
White Noise, Pink Noise, Brown Noise — Which Is Best for Sleep
A practical comparison of the three most common noise colors used as sleep aids, and how to pick the right one for your situation.
Sound Healing for Tinnitus — A Careful Guide to What Helps
A measured look at the sound-based approaches that can support tinnitus management, and the marketing claims that should be approached with skepticism.
Binaural Beats for Sleep — What the Research Actually Shows
Delta-range binaural beats are widely sold as a sleep aid. Here is a careful look at what the published research supports, and what it does not.