Hi all, I’m relatively new to this whole self-hosting thing and I have been loving it. I have several instances setup on my Debian server except for an audiobooks one. My wife loves audiobooks and asked me a way she can get audiobooks on the fly. I have searched online and found many.
Audiobookshelf is the most recommended one, but I don’t really know much about it beside what I read. Most of it I didn’t understand since I’ve never set up anything like that before. I don’t know the technical details on audiobooks like I do on music for example. So I’m not sure. Audiobookshelf has an app for iOS in test flight but its beta is full. And every client for it has an “in-app purchase” tag and I’m not sure what they hide behind a paywall. I’ve also read that Navidrome (which I already have set up on the sever) works, too but it needs to be “tagged” correctly. I’m not sure how to and what to use to tag audiobooks. I use kid3 for music, would it work for books, too?
I don’t want to commit and go through the whole setup then end up hitting roadblocks. So any info would be very much appreciated.
Thank you all.
@DonutsRMeh #Audiobookshelf is the way to go on #android. My family does use #ios at all so i can’t sleak to that. It is one of the most used piece of software I #selfhost other than #nextcloud.
I tried a lot of apps and didn’t like any of them. So I used AI to slop code a rss feed of my audiobooks folder. Very very simple setup and doesn’t require an additional phone app. You get to use your favorite podcast app too.
Ha. That sounds like a good idea. Never thought about it that way.
Audiobookshelf!
Here is where I saved how I did it: https://wiki.gardiol.org/doku.php?id=services%3Aaudiobookshelf
That’s really nice. Thank you.
I just sync the titles I want to listen to, to my phone using syncthing.
It just works reliably in all cases with no dicking around.
Audiobookshelf is fine, but if Wife Approval Factor is important this is what I’d do.
That said my partner and I are both team android so if you’re iOS then your SOL with syncthing I think.
Yes, the wife is hardcore iPhone. That’s all she used her whole life. I’ve setup Audiobookshelf and it’s not bad. Kinda looks like jellyfin in a way. Still experimenting
Set up audiobookshelf via docker. I like using portainer to manage docker containers because it has a GUI. Command line stuff is more difficult if you don’t have the background experience to go with it. I think doing it all in a GUI feels more comfortable for most people.
Docker can also be kind of intimidating if you are just wading into the self hosting world but it really is much simpler to use once you get the hang of it. Portainer helps a ton with that. Audiobookshelf would be great to start with both imo because it’s a pretty basic set up. You have to define a storage location for your library and config files and that’s about all it takes to get it up and running.
I recently got into all this and remember well what it was like to feel out of my element so feel free to ask questions if you have any. I’m no expert but I’m happy to share what I can.
I did setup Audiobookshelf via normal apt in the command line. I also have docker for other things, but this time I wanted to try things the normal way to see. It wasn’t bad. It created a config file that has two lines in /etc and I just created a folder in /srv and and dumped the files there and pointed the client to it. Still experimenting with it and a client app called “Audiobooth”. Not bad so far.
Nice, it sounds like you’re learning stuff just fine. I recommended it elsewhere in the comments here but if you’re looking for audiobook sources I suggest checking out libro.fm. They give half of your purchase price to a local bookstore of your choice and you can download the files in multiple formats with no DRM.
This is what I’m doing and all my friends and fam who like the books have accounts and it works very well. Direct replacement for audible.
Libro.fm seems to be a solid paid service. They give half of your purchase price to a local bookstore of your choice and you can download the files in multiple formats with no DRM.
Fuck audible and fuck Amazon. They literally used my card without my permission to charge for an audible subscription. I had to call them and get my money back. Closed all of my accounts with these fuckers.
Audiobookshelf is fantastic, however if you aren’t ready to self host I would have a long think about if you want to start pulling that thread.
We are not IOS users so can’t comment on client software but the experience on Android is pretty good.
Got my wife set up and a few titles from Librivox for her to stream while driving across my home state for work and she essentially jumped from Google Play Books to Audiobookshelf without missing a beat, saved us a lot of money on a voice she largely ignores to help her focus.
I SelfHosted a buncha things. I’ve been working on moving away from big tech for a while now. Set up ABS to experiment with it and it’s been nice so far. Found a decent iOS client that is FOSS. It’s called Audiobooth. Wife is the iOS user, I’m a user of both iOS and Android.
@DonutsRMeh I run AudioBookShelf
With Plappa for iOSThank you :)
That’s what I used to use on iOS now I use Audiobookshelf and LitLyric on Android. I like Audiobookshelf a lot
AudioBooth is a free and open source iOS app for Audiobookshelf.
I actually didn’t realize it was open source until I read your comment. That’s why it felt like a nice place and didn’t lock anything behind a paywall. Money well spent then. :)
AudioBookShelf + Prologue (iOS)
I ran ABS + Plex for a while, but the latest major release from Prologue broke Plex libraries and it was faster to switch to ABS than it was to wait for a patch.
Performance is comparable with ABS, but sessions are stored on the ABS side so client switching is easier than it was with Plex
I got Audiobooth and it doesn’t lock some features behind a paywall like prologue does. It only has options to donate. Sent the dev a donation of course and gonna keep trying it out.
Good news, you don’t need an app for audiobookshelf. If the iOS devs are trying to leach money from you, you can just use the web client to stream your books. The only downside is I don’t think you’ll be able to download files for offline use.
Found a FOSS client that doesn’t leech, they don’t lock anything behind a paywall, they just ask for a donation as an option, which is very nice of them. Already sent them one donation and I’ll be sending more if the wife enjoys her new app :)
I have been testing the waters and on iOS AudioBooth is the client i would recommend.
https://apps.apple.com/gb/app/audiobooth-audiobooks-player/id6753017503
Official ABS client via testflight drains the battery more and can be connection issues when ABS server is behind a VPN (iOS vpn implementation is one to blame). Plappa as mentioned is a second best client in my opinion.
Thank you. I’ve tried both Plappa and Audiobooth. I like the latter more.
@DonutsRMeh@lemmy.world I’d start with ABS anyway. It is the most mature selfhosted Audiobooks platform out there right now. My only paint points have been that their API docs are lackluster.
Thank you. I’ve set it up on the server and I’m now experimenting with it. Pretty nice so far







