This is probably a dumb question but what is a better way to send a link to a song to friends without using Spotify? I don’t use Spotify anymore so I don’t like going back to that website just to copy a song link so people could hear it. I know I could send something like a YouTube link but I’m trying to degoogle so I wanted to see if there was an alternative? Can you send songs as last.fm links? Idk I just randomly thought about this and wanted to ask if I’m being weird or something Thanks in advance
(Edited to fix typo)
What about this? https://songwhip.com/
Cool! I didn’t know about this. Thanks for the recommendation.
That’s perfect! Thank you so much!
The degoogled, open source way is to send them a link to your self-hosted media server.
I wish I could but I don’t have one :( I have no money and no knowledge of where to search for a good guide to start
Don’t listen to these guys, there’s a really easy solution:
- Set you voice mail greeting to the song you want to share
- Share your phone number with your group or post it online to the folks you want to share the song with
- Don’t answer your phone for a few days
Lol that’s one way of doing it I suppose
what if your friends are in another country
For private use, you could set it up on any old pc, a router or a Raspberry Pi.
The time to learn is the limiting factor.Can the device be turned off to give it a rest or does it need to be running all the time? I dont know if my dad is still going to use our pi3 for games (and i know i dont need anymore computers rn either)… maybe i could run it on my laptop? But i use it for school… I gotta think about it. In the meantime, do you have any guides that can reduce the time to learn?
I’m not super well-versed on the music side of self-hosted media management, but in regards to running it all the time - you can shut it off, however no one will be able to access any media from it while its offline (unless there’s a download/save-offline feature for whichever platform is used).
Alright that makes sense, thank you
It needs to be running all the time you need its services. If it’s not running it can’t serve you music.
Modern PCs and laptops don’t have an issue with that, even with Windows 10/11.
But a Raspberry Pi with a large HDD (with its own power supply) attached would be perfect IMO.Alright, thank you. I’ll see if I can use the pi for this then
There’s a self-hosting Community here: !selfhosted@lemmy.world
But for a pretty easy and low cost way to get started you can’t go wrong with yunohost - it has lots of music server apps such as funkwhale, amapache etc.
Ooh thank you for the community and the link! I’ll have to look into those!
Just send the mp3 file.
this is the only correct answer
I know I’m middle aged but … MP3s? A few megabytes isn’t that much these days.
I haven’t touched an MP3 file for years. Everything’s streamed.
I still touch MP3 because it is compact and we need everything to be stored locally.
I just didn’t want to look weird/sus plus mp3s don’t always do a preview thing in discord (I know, I’m trying to switch to matrix) so sometimes it makes you download the file But yeah I guess I can just send the file
I’m curious about this too, but more for for sharing long, self-made playlists. A single song is not too bad to send or find on YouTube but a playlist is difficult
Some alternative clients of Apple Music I use use the API of this to copy “universal” song/album links. It also has functions as a music search engine so maybe it can be useful to you. It’s not FOSS and its privacy policy could be better though. https://odesli.co/
That looks interesting!
Maybe piped?
Find it on Piped or some other YouTube front end that isn’t associated with Google aside from allowing you to watch the videos uploaded to YT.
I’m confused, can you not just search “Blur Song 2 spotify” (for example) in your browser and copy the link that comes up without ever actually clicking it or using Spotify? I don’t use Spotify either but sometimes want to show my friends songs and I know they won’t listen unless it’s a Spotify link so I do this.