From 61ffa8466bbfa4ca8b13b442a3bd63ef9504a6da Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: EuAndreh Date: Wed, 30 Apr 2025 06:23:27 -0300 Subject: src/content/en/: Unpluralize collection names --- src/content/en/til/2020/11/14/gpodder-media.adoc | 21 +++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 21 insertions(+) create mode 100644 src/content/en/til/2020/11/14/gpodder-media.adoc (limited to 'src/content/en/til/2020/11/14') diff --git a/src/content/en/til/2020/11/14/gpodder-media.adoc b/src/content/en/til/2020/11/14/gpodder-media.adoc new file mode 100644 index 0000000..f722f35 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/content/en/til/2020/11/14/gpodder-media.adoc @@ -0,0 +1,21 @@ += gPodder as a media subscription manager + +:re-discover: https://www.charlieharrington.com/unexpected-useless-and-urgent +:gpodder: https://gpodder.github.io/ + +As we {re-discover}[re-discover] the value of Atom/RSS feeds, most useful feed +clients I know of don't support media, specifically audio and video. + +{gpodder}[gPodder] does. + +It is mostly know as a desktop podcatcher. But the thing about podcasts is that +the feed is provided through an RSS/Atom feed. So you can just use gPodder as +your media feed client, where you have control of what you look at. + +I audio and video providers I know of offer an RSS/Atom view of their content, +so you can, say, treat any YouTube channel like a feed on its own. + +gPodder will then managed your feeds, watched/unwatched, queue downloads, etc. + +Being obvious now, it was a big finding for me. If it got you interested, I +recommend you giving gPodder a try. -- cgit v1.2.3