Low-latency live audio streaming from any DAW direct to a browser, beloved by mix engineers.
remote DAW collaboration
LISTENTO is a niche but excellent tool — stream your DAW's output to a browser anywhere with minimal latency. Podcasters reach for it for remote mix review or a high-quality monitor feed. Not a multitrack recorder; treat it as a transport layer for serious audio workflows. From $99/yr Basic.
Audiomovers built LISTENTO for music engineers who needed to play a mix to a remote artist or client without compressing the audio into oblivion. The product is a DAW plugin that streams the host bus to a browser URL anywhere on the planet, with latency low enough to feel close to real-time and quality high enough that mastering engineers will use it for review sessions. For podcasters, the legitimate use cases are narrower but real — sending a live feed of the show to a remote producer for direction, streaming a high-quality monitor to a co-host who's editing live, or letting a sponsor listen to a read in real time. None of those are everyday workflows for most podcasts, which is why LISTENTO sits in the niche-pro category. It's not a recording tool. You still capture the show in your DAW; LISTENTO just transports what you're mixing to other ears. Plans start at $99/yr for Basic, climbing to $199 for Pro and $275 for Business, with monthly options available at proportional rates. For studios that have outgrown Zoom-for-monitoring and need broadcast-quality remote listening, it's the standard answer. The bundle with Omnibus and Inject adds routing and recording possibilities for setups where audio needs to traverse multiple apps cleanly.
Browser-based studio that records each guest locally in 4K, then helps you edit.
Remote recording, AI editing, hosting and monetization stitched into one workflow.
Remote recording with progressive local uploads, now bundled with Descript.
Low-latency live audio streaming from any DAW direct to a browser, beloved by mix engineers.
Audiomovers LISTENTO is shaped for remote daw collaboration. Its biggest strength: tight low-latency audio over the internet. Podcasters reach for it for remote mix review or a high-quality monitor feed
not a recording tool — streams only; niche use case for most podcasters. None of these are deal-breakers on their own, but they're worth knowing before you commit.
It's a paid tool in the $ range. Some plans have a free trial — check the latest on their pricing page.
Closest in the same category: Riverside, Zencastr, SquadCast. Each has its own shape — see the alternatives page for a side-by-side.