Choosing a tool
Honest comparisons and buyer questions — what a browser editor is genuinely good for, and when it is not.
There has never been more choice in free, browser-based editing tools, and that is exactly the problem — the marketing all sounds identical, so it is hard to tell which claims are real. This cluster is the buyer's-guide layer: neutral, specific questions to ask before you trust a tool with your files, and honest answers about where a browser editor genuinely competes with a desktop suite and where it does not.
Two questions matter more than the feature checklist. The first is where your files are processed. "Runs in your browser" can mean the work happens on your device, or it can mean the tool uploads your file to a server and shows you the result — very different things for a contract or a personal photo. The guides explain how to tell the difference (the honest signal: does it still work with your connection switched off) and why EditItAll is built so every editor and converter runs locally, with nothing uploaded. The second is honesty about limits: a tool that tells you what it cannot do — the way our comparison pages do — is usually more trustworthy than one that claims to do everything.
From there the guides get practical: which free editors are actually worth using for a given job, whether browser tools are safe for confidential files, and how the everyday 90% of edits rarely needs the expensive option at all.