I'm deGoogling. What's my new Podcast app?

I’ve been warming up to switching to GrapheneOS for months. Last month I bought a Pixel 8 (which is the buggiest effing phone I’ve ever owned, good job Google). I’ve just been waiting to have the bandwidth.

But with Google sunsetting Google Podcasts, I’ve decided to make time next week. Podcasts are a MAJOR part of my daily functioning.

DolphinMath,

Podverse is a solid choice. It’s also cross-platform if that matters to you. Antenna-pod is another good choice.

Turbo,

+1 for Podverse

Manmoth,

I really love Podverse but ended up going back to Pocketcasts for the Android Auto support. They have a bounty out for the feature. I’ll switch back if they ever get it.

Floggmuff,

Podcasts? Idk i use only rumble and YouTube. My reply probably isn’t that helpful

mac,
@mac@infosec.pub avatar

“My reply probably isn’t helpful” - replies anyway… CONFIDENCE.

sugar_in_your_tea,

Same. That said, I’ve been trying it Grayjay and like it okay so far. So far I only have Odysee and YouTube channels, and I’ll be looking out for other services as well (thinking of trying a Nebula account).

It’s not useful for podcasts, but there are podcasts on services it supports, so depending on what OP is looking for, it could work.

linuxoveruser,

I recently switched from Google Podcasts to Podcini (fork of Antennapod) and it’s great so far

Duke_Nukem_1990,

Since a lot of people have recommended antennapod: does anyone of you also have that weird problem where podcasts randomly skip backwards from anywhere as little as five seconds to a minute during normal playback?

ProperlyProperTea,

I have this too on occasion! Although, I think I had this problem on another podcast player before I switched.

robsuto,

Yes! I thought it was just me. Any idea how to resolve?

Duke_Nukem_1990,

Set playback speed to max. The podcast will now have less time to skip until it is over. taps head

Schlemmy,

Thanks for the lolz. I needed that.

anothermember,

Nothing beats just downloading a podcast and listening to it in VLC or you audio player of choice - I don’t really understand why podcast apps are needed.

But that said, if you need to use one AntennaPod has all the features and you can even get it on F-Droid.

null,

A nice interface to search for shows, automatically download new episodes, listening history, options to trim silence, sync between multiple devices.

Nobody needs them, but of course people want them.

anothermember,

The problem is for me that it usually downloads to some obscure folder, not to where I want to save and archive my podcasts.

null,

Any podcast app I’ve used saves them wherever it needs to be able to read them.

I think saving and archiving podcasts is a niche use-case. I’ve jumped between apps and I just go resubscribe to the shows I want. If I need to find an old episode, I just go to that show and stream or download that episode.

I can’t think of a reason why I’d need to keep those files stored anywhere.

anothermember,

If you don’t really care about the podcast then that’s OK, but if I like a podcast I want a permanent offline copy to relisten to if the podcast goes offline. I guess I’m a bit of a data-hoarder and that’s niche, but simply being able to save a file you download to where you want I think should be a standard feature, there’s no need for an extra layer of abstraction.

null,
anothermember,

AntennaPod is one of the better ones but it doesn’t beat the good old-fashioned “Save As” where you can put it wherever you like. I don’t want a podcast app to manage my files, a file-manager does that.

null,

Hard disagree. I’d much prefer it manage the files for me. I can’t see a reason why you’d need to be constantly changing folder structure enough to warrant managing that manually.

anothermember,

I’m not changing folder structure constantly, I just want it somewhere sensible where I can find it.

null,

So what’s wrong with deciding that, and then letting the app manage it from there?

anothermember,

It’s an unnecessary layer of abstraction that solves a problem that never existed. If you have a lot of podcasts it’s nice to be able to organise them in a directory structure that makes sense to you, not necessarily what the app wants. Also podcast file names aren’t always easily sortable or even human-readable so you’ll want to rename them as you save them.

null,

The problem that exists is finding, downloading, and organizing all those podcasts. Doing that all manually is a major chore with no upside.

enix,

Any of these

podcasting2.org/apps

catculation,
@catculation@lemmy.zip avatar

Check out Podcini which is a fork of Antenapod but with all the latest android libraries and apis

TunaLobster,

I’m using PodcastRepublic on Android right now. It does a fantastic job of organizing my daily playlist for exactly what order I prefer to listen to episodes. The down side is that there is no easy way to translate this nice playlist stuff to the browser website. The state of the website is “mostly functional” and plays audio. Not much else. There is no sync to the Android app.

What I am going to try next is Audiobookshelf with a python script on their API to get the same playlist sorting features. I’ve got the architecture written out, but haven’t gotten the time to write the code.

Reading into gpodder here is making want to give that a try, but the only website listed on this table doesn’t say it syncs playback progress.

So what I’m looking for is something this can sort playlists like PodcastRepublic and sync playback progress like PocketCasts. AFAIK that combo doesn’t exist right now.

spez_,

Audiobookshelf

Evotech,

Spotify? I mean most are there

mholiv,

Spotify isn’t really a podcast app. Just a proprietary streaming service. Podcasts by definition are media files delivered by RSS and Spotify isn’t that.

Evotech,

I don’t think RSS and filetype is what I would use to define podcasts…

mholiv,

Consider yourself one of today’s 10.000. :)

What differentiates a podcast from other forms of media like YouTube is that it is delivered via RSS feeds. This lets people subscribe to the podcast using any sort of RSS reader or standards compliant podcast app.

RSS is an open source standard way subscribe to a stream of content. Sort of like a proto version of pub/sub protocol that the fediverse uses.

The reason why podcasts took off in the first place was that any mp3 player (or now days smart phone) could receive the media by subscribing to the open standards RSS feed. There was no proprietary lock in.

Mega corps obviously are not a fan of that so they try to lock people into their services regardless of this open standard. When Spotify did that exclusivity deal with Joe Rogen it was very controversial because it took the most popular podcast of the time and turned it into a proprietary media stream that you can only listen to on Spotify.

github.com/…/PSP-1-Podcast-RSS-Specification

Podcasting is the preparation and distribution of audio files using RSS feeds to the devices of subscribed users.

TwinTusks,
@TwinTusks@bitforged.space avatar

Spotify is terrible for podcasts

nafzib,

I love Player.fm

They have both an android app with a lot of good features (stream or download, can set how many episodes to download at a time, when to delete old ones, all per podcast and as global defaults, set up your own categories/lists, display order, play order, etc) and an actual web site where you can log in and listen to your stuff as well with synced history, so you can pick up pretty much at the exact spot you paused a podcast on your phone (or vice versa).

Mikelius,

If you self host nextcloud, another option is to put the rss feeds for your favorite podcasts into the news app. I listen to all of my podcasts through that.

However… I’d totally be interested in a better self hosted podcast app that allows me to see a record of everything I’ve listened to, while also allowing me to download the episodes to my phone, lol. That’s the only reason I’m stuck on the news app still.

LilaOrchidee,

Maybe the gpoddersync-nextcloud app is more your thing? You can use that with all podcastapps that support gpodder sync. Works with Antennapod on Android and Kasts on KDE/Kubuntu.

Mikelius,

Oooo I don’t know how I missed that one. Nice, I’ll have to check that out, thanks!!

TunaLobster,

Audiobookshelf is self-hosted and has an Android app. Playback is synced between everything.

pdxfed,

93 nominations for the same thing, means I’m probably the wrong answer but I don’t Graphene, but I was degoogling and found PlayerFM listed among good Free Open Source Software FOSS options. Hope it works as Graphene option.

clay_pidgin,

I don’t use graphene (yet?) but Player FM is pretty good. I had their paid plan for years. I’m on PocketCasts now.

gortbrown,

I personally like Podverse.

Cwilliams,

I personally switched my mom over to Pocket Casts after the news that Google Podcasts was shutting down. I don’t listen to podcasts, tho, and I really just picked it because it was rated well. It’s also not FOSS

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