Do the sounds actually need to match in pitch? My understanding is these sounds attempt to stop your brain noticing or perhaps generating the tinnitus, rather than masking the noise with something louder (like people do with a fan or noise generators)
Most tinnitus is neurological, and not sound but the perception of sound. Reverse waveform would just make it louder. At least for tinnitus from partial hearing loss, sound therapy seems to be about training or resetting neurons so they don't perceive sound when they are not receiving normal input.
I'm pretty sure someone who has accumulated deep knowledge and expertise on NSE gets paid a lot more for their time. Unless you're talking about ChatGPT computational time?
I would use it if the LLM they used were better. It keeps inventing files that don't exist. If I could just provide my GPT-4 API key so it can use GPT-4 I'd be happy.
They use Claude 2 as AI backend with a 100K context window. In my experience Claude is better at programming than GPT-4 because it has a much younger cut-off date and because of the context window to process knowledge.
Halluzination happens with all LLM's.
Is it better than Abletons Audio-to-MIDI Converter? The issue with Abletons is if I play fast piano pieces with chords that have many notes it messes up the timing and the notes. It also gets velocity of the notes wrong.
I read this book as an introduction to cryptography. Very well written. More understandable and easier to follow than any other texts I've read on cryptography.
We talked about why Flash died, App store algorithms, the future of browser games and how their Flash game Flipside was played over 100 million times but made almost no money.
Babel is good if you want a well established app though.