I didn't explain that part. Starting with the 3.5.0 version, the app is saving the media progress every 5 seconds. It prevents a progress loss if something bad happens (such as an app crash). So if it happens, you will, at worst, resume 5 seconds before the time you were at.- seek to a time and let it play for 5 seconds (I'll talk about that later)
YesIf needed? If Android needs its resources?
Even after an hour? A day? A Week? We cannot discriminate why the service has been killed and have different behavior then.However, it still seems like a bug. VLC may tell Android it is free to kill the player service, but the user expects VLC to pick up where he left it.
If your media is 2h09 long it is considered a podcast. If you are having a bug with it (and with 3.5.0 RC), feel free to open an issue in our tracker or explain reproduction steps here.The algorithm for deciding whether an MP3 is a podcast seems sensible. But is it working? The file I observed this bug with is 2h09 long.
There may indeed be cases where the user forgets he has paused a podcast. There is no way for VLC to guess how long it will take for this to happen. Therefore, VLC should be ready to resume in all cases, rather than discarding state.Even after an hour? A day? A Week?
I explained reproduction steps and desired behavior above in my post of Jul 2022 09:15. The only thing you don't have is the medium; it is the complete "Larry Kudlow Show" from wabcradio.com —Does not seem to have ID3, but shouldn't matter due to its length.If you are having a bug with it (and with 3.5.0 RC), feel free to open an issue in our tracker or explain reproduction steps here.
That's exactly the point of the "resume playback" feature.There is no way for VLC to guess how long it will take for this to happen. Therefore, VLC should be ready to resume in all cases, rather than discarding state.
I explained reproduction steps and desired behavior above in my post of Jul 2022 09:15.
I am not able to reproduce. If you go back to the browse main screen when you reopen the app, it means that your device was in such a great memory pressure, VLC has been killed (not just the service). In that case, you should at worst lose 5s. I just tried with your sample and it works great.Go back into VLC via home-screen icon: It has reverted to Browse main screen (list of media and favorites), podcast has to be restarted manually then fish for location at which paused.
It's at More... > Settings (Extra settings) > Interface (Audio) > Show last playback tipMay I ask for clarification on where to find the "resume playback" setting
Very possible; my Samsung J3 and J7 have only 2 Gb and usually have a browser running. VLC is still in Recents; it has merely forgotten it was playing a podcast. I don't "lose" anything except the saved position.I am not able to reproduce. If you go back to the browse main screen when you reopen the app, it means that your device was in such a great memory pressure, VLC has been killed (not just the service). In that case, you should at worst lose 5s. I just tried with your sample and it works great.
When you are in the "Audio" screen (be sure to be in that screen or it won't work), you should get a message at the bottom allowing you to resume. If not, you also have a menu item at the top right corner. Depending on your device size, it can be a play button inside a round arrow or it can be in the overflow (3dot icon) > "Resume playback"May I ask for clarification on where to find the "resume playback" setting
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