Try nostalgicpod.com
ObsidianZed@lemmy.world 3 days ago
I tried Navidrome as well as Jellyfin, but I just struggled with the bare minimum QoL enhancements that I’ve been spoiled by, like being able to have playlists and liked songs and also be able to download and see all of that on my phone while offline. It may have just been the (android) client apps I was trying, but please someone prove me wrong.
Honestly, I would probably be better off just buying a cheap generic mp3 player with a microSD card slot.
EncryptKeeper@lemmy.world 3 days ago
Joelk111@lemmy.world 3 days ago
Symphonium and Tempest are both android clients that support Navidrome and all the features you mentioned (if I’m reading your comment correctly)
ObsidianZed@lemmy.world 3 days ago
I tried Tempo previously and something did not work as expected. It looks like this is a fork so I’ll check it out.
I also remember downloading Symfonium and realized it was only a free trial so I admittedly never gave it a chance. Maybe I’ll test it out. I’m just not crazy about the idea of paying for it.
Symfonium is worth paying for, coming from a dude who had paid for like 10 apps ever.
fleem@piefed.zeromedia.vip 3 days ago
i agree with this! I paid for symfonium, but it is tied to g00g play, so its a little bit of a hassle every time i need to move phones or reinstall gOS
kureta@lemmy.ml 3 days ago
Iaam using Tempus, which probably is another fork, and I am really satisfied with it.
@Joelk111 @ObsidianZed Symfonium supports Jellyfin as its media source as well, along with just about every other non-streaming-service option you can imagine. I have a copy, it does track mixes that please my ears, just about everything I need anyways.