![]() Initial installation of gPodder from the Software Manager was successful, but no podcast feeds were set up initially. In the absence of interest and/or responses to this thread, I decided to test the first option above on another couple of machines (eeePC 1000H 32 bit, no Timeshift HP15 laptop 64 bit, with Timeshift) as follows. However, if this proves to be too difficult or risky, I will leave things as they are, and just remember to clear the Downloads folder regularly, by manually copying podcasts to the Data partition.Īny experiences or expertise regarding this would be greatly appreciated. I need Windows to allow me to run iTunes so I can load up my iPod Nano 7th Generation, which gtkPod won't work with. My aims in getting the downloads into the Data partition (NTFS) are to avoid filling up my system partition with podcasts, but also to allow them to be read by Windows (running either in a separate bare metal partition, or a VM). The alternative option of running commands about environment variables in terminal seems quite fraught, and above my level of understanding, judging by this post in the gPodder archives:Ĭoncerns seem to be raised about the differences between system wide versus profile specific environment variables (!?) Maybe it is best to use only the second line, and leave the gPodder Home directory contents (except the Downloads directory) in the usual Home directory? Also, the last directory (/gPodder) may be redundant, if it is created by this new environment variable, similarly to usual installation. The second line may be redundant, if the first line results in the whole gPodder Home folder, including the Downloads directory, being shifted to the Data drive. GPODDER_DOWNLOAD_DIR=/media/frank/NUC-DATA/gPodder/Downloads With a bit more work to port there is also AudioAnchor for Android which might have some useful code or ideas, it seems to support content plugins to get podcasts or audiobook libraries.Code: Select all GPODDER_HOME=/media/frank/NUC-DATA/gPodder * Qt (4.7.x with PySide bindings)(optional) * GTK (2.x with python bindings)(optional) If the deps can be met it will be easy to compile(I just did it on Ubuntu-Mate 20.04) and add to the repos, not sure how to recommend it be added to the build queue though. ![]() On the N900 it is tied into the system's skip/back/pause for A2DP but not the main system play/pause commands for Pine I think there is one system as I will eventually like to be able to control book playback from a rented car stereo's skip/pause buttons AND from my smartwatch once that integration has been done. It would be nice if th Pinephone build was built to play AAC, OGG, m4b and other formats than just MP3 as the Maemo5(N900) build does. The skip buttons, and save on close are deal makers vs a music shuffle app. On my current phone, N900, there is Panucci(FOSS) which works pretty well has -60sec,-15sec, play/pause, +15sec, +60sec, and bookmark touch buttons as well as a progress bar that can be slid around or locked for fumble fingers, also saves position on app close you can load a playlist, single file, or play in order files in a directory. This is a must have for me too on a daily driver phone. (08-06-2020, 04:56 PM)moto圆 Wrote: (snip)Īny suggestions for an audio player with skip-ahead/back capability?
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