DAAAM vs. Peakto
Peakto is the closest competitor to DAAAM in local-first philosophy — macOS-only, imports from Lightroom and FCPX, and even transcribes dialogue locally. The real differences are catalog-integration depth vs. raw-footage search depth.




| Feature | DAAAM | Peakto |
|---|---|---|
| Natural language searchPeakto categorises by subject/style keywords; DAAAM parses full descriptive queries against editorial vocabulary | basic | |
| AI editorial descriptionsPeakto auto-tags subjects and styles but doesn't generate narrative shot descriptions | ||
| Audio transcription + searchPeakto also transcribes dialogue locally and makes it searchable by phrase, jumping to timecode | ||
| Local operation | ||
| Lightroom catalog integration | ||
| FCPX library integration | ||
| GPS location mapping | ||
| One-time purchase availablePeakto's Standard plan offers a lifetime licence alongside its subscription tiers |
DAAAM
Raw footage search with AI editorial descriptions — local
Peakto
Multi-catalog unification across Lightroom/FCPX — local
Bottom line
Peakto and DAAAM are genuinely similar in philosophy: macOS-native, local-first, no cloud dependency, and both offer one-time pricing alongside their other plans. The real difference is what each is built to browse. Peakto is built to unify existing catalogs — Lightroom, Capture One, FCPX, Premiere, Resolve — into one library view, with local audio transcription built in. DAAAM is built to search raw, unedited footage by describing the shot in plain English, with structured editorial descriptions (shot type, lighting, mood) generated automatically for every frame. If you already have a catalog spread across multiple NLEs and want one view over it, Peakto is worth evaluating. If you want AI-generated editorial descriptions of every shot in your raw footage, DAAAM ships that today.
DAAAM is available now — $69, one-time. No cloud account. No subscription.