• paraphrand@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    What’s an example of an alternative with a really great recommendation algorithm?

    Things like recommendation algorithms are difficult for small companies/individuals to provide. Let alone the library of music.

    • Madzielle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      5 hours ago

      No algorithm but buying physical media again is one path.

      A few months ago I got a couple CDs and I’m hoping to rebuild my collection and get off Spotify. It supports artists better, and YouTube is still there to help discover new music.

      Buy a CD a month instead of your service. A roll back for technology of course, but worth trying imo

      Our musicians are getting fucked with streaming services and I like directly supporting them.

    • deranger@sh.itjust.works
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      22 hours ago

      Plexamp does a pretty good job with the radio features, granted you will have to torrent stuff you’re not necessarily familiar with first. If you have a few friends who also share their music libraries with you it can really help by including their tracks in your radios.

        • deranger@sh.itjust.works
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          18 hours ago

          Settings > playback > radio > include external media

          “Consider tracks from shared servers and TiDAL”

          Also if you just mean multiple libraries like switching between them, click at the top. I’ve got 4 of my own and 1 from a friend here.

          • mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            16 hours ago

            Also, there’s an app called Prologue that adds audiobook support to Plex’s libraries. Or rather, it parses the metadata that Plex refuses to parse.

            Basically, Plex doesn’t read audiobook metadata. It just refuses to. It can still play audiobooks, but it treats them like 250 hour long albums. Which is… Well… Not great. Especially when a single chapter can be 10-20 minutes long. But Prologue does parse metadata.

            You log into Prologue with Plex, then it uses Plex’s remote access to actually read the audiobook files. Then it does its own metadata parsing directly on your phone. So the Plex server isn’t doing any extra work to serve the file, and no config changes are required on Plex’s end. But on your phone, you get nice pretty chapters, bookmarks, speed controls, etc…

            I tried to get Audiobookshelf to work for a day or two. It just refused to read or write anything to my NAS. Everything was configured properly on the surface, and it appeared to work… But then it would lose my added audiobooks every time it restarted. After throwing myself at it for about two days, I gave up and found Prologue.

          • blitzen@lemmy.ca
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            18 hours ago

            Thank you, friend. I do have two different personal libraries, but was unaware of the “external” libraries option.

            I would welcome sharing libraries with you, if you were into such things.