Mobile apps
Audeeport has free companion apps for iOS and Android. They run the same audio engine, the same parametric EQ, and the same library tools as the desktop player, rebuilt for a phone and a thumb. There’s no separate purchase and no account needed to play your own music.
What carries over from desktop
The mobile apps share the parts of Audeeport you reach for every day:
- Your library. Tracks, albums, and artists, with favourites. Browse the same way you do on desktop. On Android you can also edit tags in place.
- Parametric EQ and output profiles. The same 10 and 31-band parametric EQ, the same presets, and the same per-device output profiles. Switch from your IEM curve to your commute earbuds in one tap.
- Audiobooks with resume. The same Books, Authors, and Groups split as desktop, with a chapter scrubber and per-book position memory. Pick up exactly where you left off, on any chapter.
- Internet radio. The Featured catalogue of public broadcasters, tag-based genre discovery, and your saved favourites.
- Podcasts. Search for a show by name or browse the top charts by category from the Pods tab, then follow it. Your subscriptions carry episode lists, descriptions, transcripts, a per-session playback speed, and offline downloads for listening on a plane or the subway.
- Lyrics. Time-synced lyrics for tracks that have them.
- Playback. Gapless playback, shuffle, repeat, and a queue, driven by the same decoding pipeline.
Built for touch
The mobile UI isn’t the desktop layout shrunk down. It’s built for one hand and a small screen.
- Gesture controls. Swipe and tap where you’d expect to. Heart a track, scrub a chapter, pull up the queue.
- Full-screen now playing. Cover art, seek bar, queue, and a shortcut into the EQ, all in one view.
- A mini-player that stays out of the way. A thin player bar sits above the tab bar with theme-tinted glass, tuned to stay legible over dark cover art.
- Cassette skin. A retro tape-deck UI with mechanical play, stop, fast-forward, and rewind buttons if you want it.
Offline by design
The mobile apps follow the same principle as the desktop player: your music is yours, and it lives on your device.
- Your library is local. Tracks live on the phone as plain files. Nothing is locked in a proprietary store.
- No account needed to play. You don’t sign in to listen to your own library. The apps are free, so there’s no license to enter either.
- Works without a connection. Once your music and downloaded episodes are on the device, playback doesn’t need the network. Radio and new podcast episodes need a connection, the same as anywhere.
What stays on desktop
Some of Audeeport’s deeper features are tied to the desktop machine and aren’t part of the mobile apps:
- Bit-perfect exclusive output. The CoreAudio exclusive path and hog mode are desktop-only.
- The DSP plugin marketplace. Crossfeed, dither, saturation, and the rest of the installable audio plugins run on desktop.
- CD ripping. Pulling audio off a disc happens on the desktop.
- Device sync. Pushing albums and audiobooks to an iPod, DAP, or USB drive is a desktop job. The phone is a sync target, not a sync source.
- Custom skins. The WebView skin format and theme builder live on desktop.
- Agent control. The headless daemon that drives the player over a local REST API is a desktop feature, not part of the mobile apps.
If you want those, keep the desktop player as your home base and use the phone for listening on the move.
Getting the apps
The iOS and Android apps are free. Check the Download page for the current links and beta access.
Where to go next
- Equalizer. The bands, presets, and output profiles your phone shares with desktop.
- Audiobooks. How books, chapters, and resume work.
- Privacy. What stays on your device.