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Instacast app
Instacast app









instacast app
  1. #Instacast app Offline#
  2. #Instacast app tv#
  3. #Instacast app mac#

#Instacast app Offline#

If you listen to podcasts even occasionally, it’s worth checking out Instacast, a full-on podcast solution that will slurp up the ones you’re already subscribed to, point out popular podcasts, and, mercifully, let you refresh all your podcasts with a single tap and download them for offline listening in a snap.

instacast app

It doesn’t make finding new podcasts particularly easy nor keeping the ones you already subscribe to up to date. There’s a lot not to like about the podcast manager that’s built in to iOS.

instacast app

Instacast, essentially an RSS reader for podcasts, makes it super simple to find podcasts, listen to them at home, or download them for when you’re out and about. No subscribing, no little blue dots, no app badges, no download management, no syncing.Everyone likes a good podcast – and if you don’t you should! – but Apple doesn’t exactly make it easy to make sure you’re staying up to date. Pacvue found that CPCs for sponsored products decreased 11 year-over-year during the first quarter with an average price of 1.14.

instacast app

Press play to watch or listen to said content. Star/favorite/queue a podcast to put it in your starred/favorites/queue list. hand (and many of you wont) then the best bet for tuning your ukulele is an app.

#Instacast app tv#

Pressing play on a podcast (rather than an individual episode) would by default start playing the first episode that you hadn’t watched (just like how Netflix handles TV shows). Now, Im not saying the following apps and guides will turn you into a. If you had already watched or listened to an episode that would be indicated (just like Hulu and Netflix track viewing). Viewing a podcast listing would show some details (name, description, etc.) and all the episodes. (Favorites could be called starred or queue or whatever. When you launch my dream podcast app you would have three tabs: favorites, browse, and search. Here’s what I propose: throw that all in the trash. You might think this is hyperbole, but to me this is so. All these layers leads to a lot if UI, a lot of settings, a lot of “helpful” extras (like the Podcasts app that stops updating your subscriptions if you don’t listen often enough). And then in addition to all that, there is often another layer of download management. And rather than just mark what I’ve played, it marks what I haven’t played. After subscribing, rather than just showing me all the episodes, it shows me the most recent five or ten (often controlled by a setting – more management). Subscribing adds the podcast into a separate area that I then have to manage. But instead of just playing those directly I have to subscribe.

#Instacast app mac#

Yes, there is a catalog or store of podcasts. Theres also a Mac version, so you can have Instacast on all your Apple devices. Instead, every podcast app that I have used adds additional layers of management. I want a podcast app that works like Netflix. Some of it you have marked as interesting to you (your queue). With Netflix, there is a library of content. Part of what I love about it is that it removes so many layers of management. What I really want is a podcast app that works like Netflix. In the course of trying to set Apple’s Podcasts up with the podcasts I like, and then thinking about my rationale for going back to Instacast, I realized that at a fundamental level none of the podcast apps work the way I’d like. It just didn’t do anything any better and I had already put the work in with Instacast. The reason that I abandoned it wasn’t that it was bad, actually, or at least no worse than any other podcast app out there. After messing around with it a bit I ended up abandoning it and going back to Instacast, my podcast app of choice. Apple just updated their podcasts app to a state that seems actually usable so I gave it another shot.











Instacast app