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    <title>walkman on Kenny&#39;s Blog</title>
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      <title>Using a Standalone MP3 Player to Listen to Podcasts</title>
      <link>https://kennyqin.com/posts/using-standalone-mp3-player-listen-podcasts/</link>
      <pubDate>Fri, 17 Nov 2023 15:13:27 +1100</pubDate>
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      <description>I wasn&amp;rsquo;t always into podcasts. I started listening to them near the start of 2020 to get my daily news of what was happening with the COVID-19 pandemic. At the time, I used my smartphone like most other people. I would mindlessly scroll through social media and I wasn&amp;rsquo;t very considerate of how I was constantly being tracked and profiled.
Nowadays, I listen to podcasts that are more appropriate to my lifestyle.</description>
      <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I wasn&rsquo;t always into podcasts. I started listening to them near the start of 2020 to get my daily news of what was happening with the COVID-19 pandemic. At the time, I used my smartphone like most other people. I would mindlessly scroll through social media and I wasn&rsquo;t very considerate of how I was constantly being tracked and profiled.</p>
<p>Nowadays, I listen to podcasts that are more appropriate to my lifestyle. As a privacy advocate, one of the podcasts I subscribe to is Michael Bazzell&rsquo;s The Privacy, Security, and OSINT Show. At some point, I got to really evaluate the tools I use in my life and how I consume them both from a privacy standpoint and a mental health standpoint.</p>
<h1 id="how-i-started-to-consume-podcasts-in-a-privacy-conscious-way">How I started to consume podcasts in a privacy-conscious way</h1>
<p>I used to subscribe to all my favourite podcasts through the FOSS Android app AntennaPod which you can get from F-Droid. I would generally download all the episodes in advance using my home internet so I could listen to them offline but the ability to stream over Wi-Fi or mobile data is certainly there.</p>
<p>Despite now having a new way to consume podcasts, which I&rsquo;ll detail in the next section, I still highly recommend to anyone looking to get into listening podcasts to use the AntennaPod app.</p>
<h1 id="how-i-now-consume-podcasts">How I now consume podcasts</h1>
<p>At some point in early 2022, I decided I wanted to reduce my dependence on my smartphone. I looked into getting something like one of the various Sandisk Clip Go models but I was not willing to actually commit to getting one. I gave up on the idea until many months later when I mentioned to a friend that I&rsquo;d been thinking about getting a standalone MP3 player.  She told me that she had a walkman that she no longer used that I could have. Now, a “walkman” to me was one of those things from the early 2000s. I didn&rsquo;t realise that the “Walkman” brand is still a thing so I was quite skeptical. I decided to try to fit it into my lifestyle anyway and have been overall happy with it.</p>
<p>In most cases, getting a copy of the audio files is done by visiting an RSS feed and saving the file. I&rsquo;ve used AntennaPod to tell me where it sources its files which makes things easier. In other cases, I download podcasts using yt-dlp. To give an example, I recently downloaded one episode of a podcast I listen to using <code>./yt-dlp.exe https://podcast-name.buzzsprout.com/1234567/1234567-episode-1-episode-name-here</code>. I then have to manually transfer the file over onto the MicroSD card that. I cannot simply plug the device into my Linux laptop as the file system is not compatible from what I&rsquo;ve experienced. I have been able to transfer the file onto the device but it always resulted in a corrupt file.</p>
<p>Now, being an “MP3 player” with no dedicated functionality, I have to get a little creative to manage my podcasts. The device supports “bookmark lists” which are effectively similar to playlists. I manage these lists by queuing the episodes manually. Unlike with AntennaPod which marks episodes as played, I “mark” an episode by removing it manually from the bookmark list. Even with this bookmark technique, I need to be careful to not play something else as that will cause me to lose the timestamp of the current podcast episode. Sometimes I&rsquo;m just lazy and I don&rsquo;t even bother creating a playlist and I just try to remember where I&rsquo;m at as best as I can.</p>
<h1 id="has-this-been-all-worth-it">Has this been all worth it?</h1>
<p>It really depends on what the individual wants to get out of it. If you&rsquo;re someone who just wants to consume podcasts in a convenient way, definitely no. If you&rsquo;d like to get a slight privacy boost or explore whether using a standalone device can benefit your mental health, it&rsquo;s something I think is worth trying. It&rsquo;s definitely a massive inconvenience to work with but part of me thinks it&rsquo;s nice to be able to detach from that one device that has managed to integrate its way into almost every aspect of our lives.</p>
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