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Audiobookshelf: Self-hosted audiobook and podcast server

https://www.audiobookshelf.org/
75•fjk•8h ago

Comments

rosege•4h ago
Thanks looks interesting
agnishom•4h ago
I host this on my homeserver. Pretty nice app so far.
senectus1•4h ago
been using it for a couple of years now. its an absolute cracker.

Pity the iOS app is almost impossible to get.

rthz•3h ago
On iOS you can use the plappa client. It’s open source and works well in my experience.
senectus1•3h ago
oh nice, I'll have a look into that. thanks!
PokerFacowaty•2h ago
Seconded, I've been using plappa for a couple months after Apple messed up PWAs after bringing them back (Audiobookshelf didn't want to change to next chapter when the app was in the background) and I'm generally very happy
efff•3h ago
Been using it for a while, amazing app!
InsideOutSanta•3h ago
What's a good source for DRM-free audiobooks? I'd love to ditch Audible and move to something like this, but I haven't found a store that has a good selection.

(Edit: thank you, everybody, for the great answers!!!)

Arn_Thor•3h ago
Audible books can be.. liberated from such encumbrances. There’s a program called Libation.
djhworld•3h ago
You can strip the DRM from audible books and create mp4s using ffmpeg.

Although, given Amazon’s recent efforts with the kindle, I’m going to say they will probably remove the ability to download books soon

once_inc•2h ago
You can quite easily flash you Kindle with new firmware that is more forgiving and abled.
navanchauhan•2h ago
If you want to sail the high seas, MyAnonaMouse is one of the best private trackers.
udev4096•2h ago
Audiobookbay has a better audio book collection than MAM. Plus, it's a public tracker and doesn't require an invite
theothertimcook•2h ago
Iirc Downbpour, I’ve just been using booklibconnect on my audibles tho.
bentley•1h ago
I primarily source my copyrighted audiobooks from Libro.fm and Downpour. Both have large (though not universal) catalogues.

Librivox has free, public domain audiobooks. The narrators are volunteers, so performance and recording quality varies, but there are some very good ones there.

Some podcasts provide legitimate audiobooks of copyrighted works, generally with similar quality caveats to Librivox. For example, the blog “Readings from Under the Grapevine” has a free, legally licensed recording of the Narnia series (except for The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe).

I never buy audiobooks with DRM, even if the DRM is trivial to break. Amazon has made clear their intentions to lock media down ever further. I shouldn’t have to put up with that, so I’m not going to support them financially.

If I can’t find a copyrighted audiobook at one of the DRM‐free shops, I get it from my library, either through Libby or by checking out a physical copy. Not that these would be helpful for someone using Audiobookshelf…

TheAceOfHearts•3h ago
I've also been using this for a while now and it works great. My only complaint is that tools for cleaning up metadata are a bit clunky if you have a very large collection. You can basically go through every item one-by-one, or you can run an automatic script to check the whole collection. It would be great if you could define certain rules to require manual review, and incrementally run the tool to improve the tags whenever you have a bit of free time to clean up your collection.

But the ideal solution would be to have some way of generating fingerprints for each audiobook, and then build up a database which matches that fingerprint to the correct metadata. That way the work of organizing and tagging large collections could be crowdsourced; this is what other communities have done.

Maybe we're not too far off from AI-assisted tools that can just figure out how to properly tag a bunch of items correctly just by looking at the filename and existing metadata. Maybe even picking up on additional contextual clues by listening to a little bit of a chapter, to check if the title of the work is mentioned at the start.

theshrike79•2h ago
So basically Musicbrainz Picard, but for audiobooks?
volteret4•2h ago
No, this is a server app for your podcasts and audiobooks, picard is the best music metadata tagger imho, but they arent related
jostyee•1h ago
Self-hosted Audible alternative
Arn_Thor•3h ago
A good solution for a standalone server. But since I use Plex already there’s an audio book plugin for it that I use along with Prologue for IOS.
heisenzombie•2h ago
I understand the audiobook server, but what’s the use case for the podcast part? You replicate a podcast on your own server, in case the original goes away?
TheAceOfHearts•2h ago
It can be configured to automatically fetch podcasts and keep a local copy. If you have a workflow for listening to audiobooks then it allows you use that same workflow for podcasts. With the mobile app you can "check out" audiobooks or podcasts and have any listening progress tracked between platforms.
theshrike79•2h ago
Yes, pretty much. You can also post-process them to remove ads etc. because you have the files on your own server.

Some podcasts remove all of their backlog when they "sell out" and go behind a paywall, having them backed up prevents that. (How did this get made?[0] being one example)

Also some podcasts (BBC ones I think) add ads while you download, based on your country. Some of my No Such Thing As A Fish[1] episodes have Christmas themed ads in them because that's when they we're cached :)

[0] https://www.earwolf.com/show/how-did-this-get-made/ [1] https://www.nosuchthingasafish.com

walthamstow•1h ago
I recently pulled the back catalogue of the Acquired podcast. All the older episodes going back as far as 2016 have adverts for Claude!
erinnh•1h ago
You can use it as that.

I use it as my podcast app.

I mostly only have the last 2-5 Episodes on my server for each Podcast. (you can automatically remove episodes if there are more than X)

Though I do keep all Episodes for 3 of my favourite Podcasts.

unsnap_biceps•1h ago
I mirror all my podcasts locally as shows do disappear before I listen to them. Wondery has a ton of shows that if you miss the few week window, they're being a wondery+ paywall.
walthamstow•1h ago
The BBC does this too.
lawn•1h ago
Dan Carlin's Hardcore History do this too.

When I setup Audiobookshelf a week ago I also bought the rest of his entire collection from his site, getting a complete library for his show.

walthamstow•1h ago
I had to stop using ABS because the Android app has a fatal flaw - you can't queue podcasts. I listen to podcasts while I'm doing dirty jobs, I can't pull my phone out and play another episode manually.
mrklol•47m ago
Somebody suggested using playlists for that on Reddit, maybe it works!
krick•32m ago
How is the Android app? The only good app for local audio-books I know is "Smart AudioBooks". The web-app GUI in the demo is less than perfect, but kinda ok, if you enable chapter-view. The biggest problem is a single set of ±10 s rewind buttons: for a dedicated audio-book player it's not enough, a separate ±1 min button set is a must. But since the authors didn't think of that, I don't expect it to be different in the Android app. I'm rather asking about mobile-specific features:

1. Does it properly stop the playback when headphones are disconnected?

2. Is there a usable lock-screen widget?

3. Does it auto-rewind after a pause? It's best when the pause duration is taken into account: it shouldn't rewind more than a couple of seconds if you pause for a second, but a whole minute may be better if you left it off yesterday.

4. Does it handle well situations when the server is not accessible? Can you just pre-download a couple of audio-books for your 10 h long flight? I mean, honestly, streaming is never desirable, the only point of a self-hosted server is that you don't have to download and delete your collection manually. It's a tricky problem when the playlist is highly variable (as with music), but for an audio-book player should be a non issue: just pre-fetch a whole book (maybe manually), storage space is a lesser issue than mobile internet.

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