After an all-too-long development phase, I'm opening the new year with a new version of Tempo.
This new version brings with it Android Auto support, one of the most requested features of all time.
Other new features include support for Chinese and Korean languages, an update to the French localization, the implementation of landscape viewing of the media player and more.
You can find Tempo on Github ready for download: it’s free, it’s open source and it’s made by the community for the community.
If you appreciate the work put into Tempo, remember that you can star the project on Github or make a donation!
It’s not much but it’s useful to help the project grow and give visibility to the app.
The OpenSubsonic project aims to extend and improve the classic Subsonic APIs in various ways: by adding new endpoints, clarifying existing APIs, or extending functionality. All while maintaining backward compatibility with the old APIs. Understanding whether the server supports the API, requesting the list of supported extensions and acting accordingly is the first step to integrating the OpenSubsonic API. Initial work was done with synchronized lyrics using an endpoint that does not exist in the classic version of the API but was introduced by OpenSubsonic.