A good lastfm scrobbler for ios7/30/2023 ![]() ![]() ![]() I have faith from MetaBrainz’s previous portfolio of work that ListenBrainz will see it through and do things the right way (it’s one reason why I’m still active in this community too). Sadly, Libre.fm is almost entirely dead, but work on ListenBrainz is slow but continuous. My belief is in supporting an active upstream project and working with a community to accomplish ambitious goals. different services) and/or lack of engagement from the community. ![]() Many ended up in developer burnout because of overwhelming project requirements to account for several moving parts (e.g. Since the early 2000s, there were several ambitious projects aspiring to capitulate over Last.fm’s dominance. The amount of overhead on you as a developer in your free time is high. I know you are an experienced developer, but consider getting involved with an upstream project. Feedback is important, but I will probably build them both either way for my own personal use if nothing else. I think it’s probably the best one out there. Same goes for the apps.īTW I looked at pScrobbler too. I think there are lots of cool features that could be in the server itself like a build guide and settings guide. Select when, where and how your metadata is created. Or run the server on your home network and scrobble everything when you get home. So you could store everything off grid if you desired and stuff like that. I have seen many implementations but not one app that won my metadata heart… I really think it would be nice if the user had full control over the api if they wanted it and also full control over local storage options should they want that too. However listenfreak will have functionality to interact with each of the other 3. I have really wasted/spent some time reading and testing the libre.fm/ code bases and the features of the big 3 music metadata sites and think I can really improve them and give the avid music listener control over all the functionality each api has to offer, and hopefully I have enough tricks up my sleeve that they’ll stick with instead of any of the others. Well I am trying make metadata music sites “fly”. I purchased the domain (it’s a dead site for now) to see if I could get the ball rolling and let me know if you read this, if that name is cool or not. This time with gitea a gogs variant which is a github variant utlimately. I purchased the domain and a little amazon server to really start testing and programming. I will also add support in web-scrobbler.That should cover most people’s devices except iOS for now. I am also using Go the programming language to build my own variant of a scrobbling (metadata recording) service which I intend to use the android client. A client with all the functionality and options and more that any of the last.fm and any of the similar apps have ever offered. I am currently building a brand new scrobbler for android that should solve most of the major issues I had while I tried to modernize and refactor Simple Last.fm Scrobbler. I mucked up the project SLS almost and will have to contact the original developer to make any major required updates. Humblebeebumblebeedebugs is another one but I lost access to the account through my own stupidity. oz10h is one of my github accounts it’s a short form of my name austin hogan. I have been using Multi-Account Scrobblers for years…Īs oz10h on github I was the guy who added support for Simple Last.fm Scrobbler and Web Scrobbler. If using web-scrobbler and you’re trying the whole FOSS OSH, save the internet bizness… try disabling google analytics in web-scrobbler options cause that’d be against your beliefs probably. It’s Official Web-Scrobbler version 2.9.0 I use the project personally already to register listens on my personal ListenBrainz account FWIW, it already has support for Last FM, Libre FM and GNU FM instances. This weekend I hope to fix some issues and add support for local ListenBrainz server installations as well. I have recently added native ListenBrainz support to it (with native, I mean it uses the ListenBrainz API and not the AudioScrobbler 2.0 compatibility API). There’s a long way to go, but the program is in heavy development and I already use it daily on my NAD C368 amplifier with the internal BluOS 2 upgrade card. The aim is that the program will be able to monitor all players of all supported types in a single household, which (eventually) can be grouped to different accounts of different music tracking services. Right now it can only monitor 1 BluOS device (from BlueSound) device, but Yamaha MusicCast and Denon HEOS support will be added (hopefully) soon. It’s a program meant to be run 24/7 on Raspberry pi devices and aims to monitor popular consumer hardware audiostreamers (as found in popular wi-fi speakers and some AV and/or hi-fi amps). My project, AudioStreamerScrobbler, can be categorized in the “In development” apps, I’d think. ![]()
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