I’ve just been using the audio player on ES File Explorer. It tends to forget all its state and has various other UI problems.

I’m interested in an audio player that will keep playlists for me, and remembers its state so I can resume playback. My main use case is to cue up podcasts for driving, so I want it to save my place when I don’t finish listening to a whole episode during my drive. Saving my place in multiple playlists would be great too, like an audiobook and a series of podcast episodes would both have saved state so I could switch between them.

Ideally it would also activate playback whenever the phone connects to a particular bluetooth device - my car audio. The use case is I hop in the car, turn on my bluetooth receiver, and audio resumes without me needing to take the phone out of my pocket. Turn off bluetooth, playback stops.

  • dez@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    I tried auxio and Metro ( a fork from Retro) and I liked it. Search for these apps on F-droid and you will find ;p

  • nobloat@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    It seems that you want a Podcast player and an Audiobook player. I use two different apps for that : AntennaPod for podcasts and Voice for Audiobooks. You can use AntennaPod also for Audiobooks, but I like to separate the two.

  • ExtremeDullard@lemmy.sdf.org
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    10 months ago

    Vinyl Music Player - Lightweight, simple, does playlist by filesystem structure, stable! You’d be surprised how difficult it is to find a music player that doesn’t have a fancy schmancy playlist and just plays files in directories, that doesn’t crash.

  • ace_garp@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Vanilla Music generally

    Have been using VLC to play .opus playlists though.

    OK, the above is for music files.

    u/nobloat has the right answer for place saving in podcasts or audiobooks. Antennapod and Voice are very clean & polished.

  • shortwavesurfer@monero.town
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    10 months ago

    I use vlc. But it does not create playlists that can be exported and then imported again, so I am making my own .m3u file