I think phones have generally taken over MP3 players because you can do everything an MP3 player does on your phone.

But I recently bought one because I just like a single device having that unique purpose of playing music.

  • @riquisimo@lemmy.world
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    132 years ago

    Does anyone else self-host their music? (I suppose this would also be a thing if you stream from Spotify) but my music device greatly benefits from having some form of Internet connection for when I want to update it.

    I self-host, so when I add music to my server my phone sees it automatically. I wouldn’t want to copy my music onto my server and onto an mp3 device, nor do I want to pay for separate internet service on an mp3 device.

    • @christophski@feddit.uk
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      42 years ago

      What are you using? I’ve got plex and jellyfin, but neither have a nice offline sync feature like Spotify (maybe paid plex does? Not sure.)

      • @Bread@sh.itjust.works
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        32 years ago

        I have plexpass which let’s me use plexamp. Personally I think it is the best feature Plex has. Plexamp rocks. You can sync offline by making playlists and having them download to your phone. It will auto update as you add more. Or just download whole albums.

        Although plexamp has an arbitrary 24 limit on downloaded playlists, due to any higher causing issues. However that can be avoided by having multiple smaller playlists.

        If you have a Linux server, you can use the features called sonic adventure and sonic sage. Sonic adventure let’s you pick 2 or more random songs and Plex will build a playlist that organically transitions between those choices.

        Sonic sage requires you to have an openai api key but basically allows you to provide a vague description of your mood or what you want to hear and it will build a playlist for it. For example “songs that feel like a nice summer day on an early July morning” is a prompt you can have.

        I don’t particularly like everything Plex does, but Plexamp appears to be their passion project and it sure does show. It has all sorts of unnecessary but really cool features. Like writing songs, playlists, or albums to NFC cards.

      • ɐɥO
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        12 years ago

        Not op but I’m using Navidrome with Tempo on my Android phone

        • be_excellent_to_each_other
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          2 years ago

          ++ Navidrome but I’ve been in love with Symfonium as an android client for about a year. Every other android client I tried seemed like warmed over versions of each other with slightly different GUI and a slightly different set of bugs.

          However, I somehow don’t think I ever tried Tempo (doesn’t ring a bell) so I’ll at least peek at it.

          • ɐɥO
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            12 years ago

            Tempo still is a bit buggy but has the best ui imo

    • @olympicyes@lemmy.world
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      32 years ago

      A half measure on this for iPhone users is Apple iTunes Match. It syncs your library to your phone for $25/year. It’s especially useful if the music you like isn’t on Spotify.

      • @Rai@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 years ago

        I’m a flac person, but when I learned Apple Muaic has lossless by default, I bit.

        It’s actually great.

    • @peo@feddit.it
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      12 years ago

      I have a huge music collection on my NAS at home that I stream with Navidrome. It works even on a cheap VPS and it was quite easy to setup.