Versions:

  • 3.3

WhatAmIHearing 3.3, published by zemoto, is an open-source Shazam client engineered to identify music playing directly on a Windows PC, eliminating the need to rely on a phone’s distant microphone. Designed for situations where system audio or headset output is clearer than ambient sound, the utility captures the internal audio stream, sends a short fingerprint to Shazam’s servers, and returns track metadata within seconds. Typical use cases include naming an unfamiliar song encountered while gaming, archiving background music from a livestream, cataloging samples inside a DJ set, or simply satisfying curiosity when a playlist lacks proper labeling. Because the program interfaces with the public Shazam API, recognition accuracy mirrors the mobile experience while remaining confined to the desktop environment. The single-version release history indicates focused development: version 3.3 refines buffering logic and reduces false positives compared with the earlier 1.x lineage, yet retains the lightweight footprint demanded by casual listeners and audio archivists alike. As an open-source project hosted under permissive licensing, the codebase invites community audit and extension, ensuring transparency for privacy-conscious users who prefer local audio processing over cloud-heavy alternatives. Functionally, the software sits in the Multimedia/Audio Recognition category, complementing editors, converters, and taggers that often leave track identification as a manual chore. Operation is straightforward: launch the executable, press the single on-screen button, and allow a few seconds for match confirmation; detected titles can be copied to the clipboard or exported as plain text for further playlist management. The application is available for free on get.nero.com, with downloads provided via trusted Windows package sources such as winget, always delivering the latest version and supporting batch installation of multiple applications.

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