![]() The dark grey number indicates the number of podcasts downloaded for that particular feed. The light grey number shows the number of podcasts that have been downloaded which haven’t been listened to. I particularly like how feeds are appended by two numbered symbols. The interface is well-thought out and clean. The above image shows gPodder in operation. As the software is written in Python, you can run it from a source checkout. Normally I prefer compiling the source code of a project, but there’s no need with gPodder. I’m a fervent Manjaro user, and their community repository offers a convenient package for gPodder, which installed without a hitch. The developers of gPodder don’t produce packages for current releases citing a “… sorry state of packaging on Linux distributions, and incompatibilities even between e.g. For Linux users, most good distributions have packaged the software. ![]() The developers provides binaries for macOS and Windows with the latter getting a portable version too. GPodder is a cross-platform utility running on Linux, macOS, and Windows operating systems. The software is very mature it’s been in development since 2005. It lets you listen to podcasts on your computer or on mobile devices. The software package also includes a command-line interface which is called gpo. The software is written in Python and sports a simple GTK interface. GPodder is an open source tool that downloads and manages free audio and video content (“podcasts”) for you. ![]()
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