It's primarily used for audiobooks. Those need to be stored somewhere.
The podcast feature of Audiobookshelf uses the same structure, so the server downloads the file and the client can then find it and either download it to your local device or stream it from your server.
If you don't want that, I wouldn't use Audiobookshelf as an intermediary tool. I'd use Pocket Casts, or antennapod or some such.
Except the team behind that suddenly got laid off last year. It was so sudden that developers were left in uncertainty because their contact person suddenly disappeared.
Yeah you’re right, it is her, it might be the camera angle or something or perhaps her bangs are slightly different than in the rest of the show. Something just felt off and I can’t put my finger on it.
How so? That makes no sense. Obviously you will have to make sure to have downloaded the maps of the area you’re going to be in before going into that area, while you still have access to the internet. You can do this any time before leaving!
There are Audible originals that you can only get on their platform. Audiobook sellers like libro.fm and streamers like Storytel don’t get access to those.
You try to read the wall of text, but it's written in a handwriting you have a lot of trouble deciphering.
You believe that it says that the pandemic caused people to stutter and that a bard was able to cure that stuttering by singing a spell of "Silence". And that the bard eats goblins all day.
I watch atheist content creators on youtube do take downs of theistic arguments.
I have been out of religion for so long that I can't fathom those theists not realizing their idiocy.
And those theists always come with such strawmen "You believe we come from a rock" (no, that's not what atheism entails, but you do believe we come from dirt, so that's actually what you believe), "why do you hate god?" (how can I hate something I don't believe exists?) "You should read the bible" (I did, cover to cover, it made me atheist, you should do it too for a change)
It's primarily used for audiobooks. Those need to be stored somewhere.
The podcast feature of Audiobookshelf uses the same structure, so the server downloads the file and the client can then find it and either download it to your local device or stream it from your server.
If you don't want that, I wouldn't use Audiobookshelf as an intermediary tool. I'd use Pocket Casts, or antennapod or some such.