I use AssetUPnP to serve music off my NAS (my collection is largely classical and has may more relevant tags than most UPnP servers handle). I have a Naim amp that understands UPnP, or BubbleUPnP on my phone.
Airsonic (like Subsonic before it) lets me have the best of both worlds by automatically transcoding my FLAC library to VBR MP3 on the fly when I stream music to my phone over LTE. It's a Java webapp (.war), and the standalone exe version just bundles (iirc) Jetty. I run it in Tomcat9 just as well.
Navidrome is a recent in the scene of alternatives. I had been running Airsonic on a Pi for about 2yrs now, and recently started to test Navidrome. It is lighter on my Pi than Airsonic and also has a refreshing UI. Since Navidrome uses Subsonic apis, any app that supports Subsonic/Airsonic will support Navidrome too.
I'have two family members which were offered the same pricing, BUT with terms clearly stating that 'google reserves right to change price any time' on the new youtube service.
I have this confirmed with YT/Google support tickets.
I bought into Google Pay back when they had the intro price of $7.99 a month and have kept it ever since. I don't really listen to Google Play, but every now and then I do. The primary reason why I keep it is so I don't have to watch the ads. For me, the cost of $7.99 is well worth not having to listen to the ads. I know not everyone would feel the same.
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[ 3.4 ms ] story [ 45.4 ms ] threadhttps://arstechnica.com/series/google-kills-product/
There's also Killed by Google:
https://killedbygoogle.com/
Airsonic (like Subsonic before it) lets me have the best of both worlds by automatically transcoding my FLAC library to VBR MP3 on the fly when I stream music to my phone over LTE. It's a Java webapp (.war), and the standalone exe version just bundles (iirc) Jetty. I run it in Tomcat9 just as well.
My client recommendations are play:Sub on iOS and DSub on Android: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/play-sub-music-streamer/id9553... https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=github.daneren...
This mess seems entirely due to Google's internal management fiefdoms than anything to do with the user.
I'have two family members which were offered the same pricing, BUT with terms clearly stating that 'google reserves right to change price any time' on the new youtube service.
I have this confirmed with YT/Google support tickets.