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Exceptions are made at mod team's discretion. Additionally, a developer may only post once per month. You must engage the community, hit and run posts are not allowed. Self promotion guidelines When self promoting a app, your self promotion must be a self post tagged with.Videos inside self posts/comments are fine. Videos aren't allowed as posts by their self. A article that is "Top 5 apps to try today!" will not be allowed. This means that a article saying "Google Hangouts v6 released, here's what's new" is fine. Articles directly about a specific app are allowed. Blog articles about apps will be allowed within moderation. Posting a link to any pirated app or asking for a pirated app, or helping users pirate apps, is an immediate seven day ban. r/AndroidApps has a zero tolerance piracy policy.That's on top of whatever your Dropbox, OneDrive, or Google Drive storage plan costs.Get community feedback on an app you have created. But keep in mind after an initial weeklong trial, you'll have to pay $4.99 to unlock permanent cloud-based playback. CloudPlayer definitely works if you want a simple way of playing the music you've got sitting in Dropbox or quickly listening to uploads for cloud accounts you share with friends.
They're simpler to use and offer a lot more.Īnd DoubleTwist's latest app isn't the only one of its kind other music players for Android can also tap into cloud storage, or even retrieve media stored on your computer or networked drive at home (i.e. So i've changed the function that returns the songs list to a recursive function but it doesn't work. If you're not either type, you'd be far better off using one of the big streaming services. The thing is that it only gets mp3 files inside /sdcard/Music/ and I also want to get mp3 files that are inside folders inside Music folder. The second would be people who simply don't have Spotify or other services available in their region. The first is someone who's meticulous about his or her music library when it comes to file quality, metadata tagging, and album artwork. To me, CloudPlayer seems like it's made for two types of people. (Chromecast and AirPlay support are nice inclusions, though.) In my brief hands-on time, playback was fine without any annoying stuttering or buffering, but this will obviously vary based on the quality of your connection. Other than barebones features like playlists, star ratings, and a 10-band EQ, there's not much else in the way of standout features.
The app supports high-fidelity formats like FLAC and offers offline playback for whenever you'll be without Wi-Fi or cellular data.
Album and artist titles pull their color from cover art, and the Now Playing screen has a slick pull-up menu for seeing what's next in the queue.
These user-hostile terms are usually hidden in the fine print of cloud music offerings by major corporations and impose arbitrary limits on the number of "authorized devices", restrict the number of times you can download your music, and penalize music enthusiasts who own multiple gadgets or frequently upgrade their phones and firmware.ĬloudPlayer has a nice look that sticks closely to Google's Material Design with some extra flourishes here and there. We created CloudPlayer to provide an alternative to crippled, proprietary cloud music lockers that impose painful restrictions on what you can do with the music you own. DoubleTwist has actually taken a pretty hash stance against Google, targeting the company's music policies in a blog post: And I'm not sure why you'd be uploading stuff to Google Drive yet not taking advantage of Google's free, music-focused storage that lets you store 50,000 songs for free. The main hook here would seem to be for Dropbox users if you've got music stored in OneDrive, you're probably listening to it with Xbox Music. You could listen to uploaded files through the individual, official apps for all of these services, but CloudPlayer can pull from all of them simultaneously. The veteran Android developer has released an app called CloudPlayer which, as its title suggests, will play back albums and tracks you've uploaded to Dropbox, OneDrive, and Google Drive. If you're not a fan of popular subscription-based apps like Spotify, Rdio, and Google Play Music, DoubleTwist has a new option for streaming music you've got stored in other cloud services.