Show HN: I built a local-first podcast app

wherever.audio

59 points by aegrumet 14 hours ago

I worked on early podcast software in 2004 (iPodder/Juice) and have been a heavy podcast consumer ever since. I wanted a podcast app that respects your privacy and embraces the open web—and to explore what's possible in the browser.

The result is wherever.audio, which you can try right now at the link above.

How it works: It's a progressive web app that stores all your subscriptions and data locally in your browser using IndexedDB. Add it to your home screen and it feels native. Works offline with downloaded episodes. No central server storing your data—just some Cloudflare/AWS helpers to smooth out browser limitations.

What makes it different:

- True local-first: Your data stays on your device

- Custom feeds: Add any RSS feed, not just what's in a directory

- On-device search: Search across all feeds and episodes, including your custom ones

- Podcasting 2.0 support: Chapters, transcripts, funding tags, and others

- Auto-generated chapters: For popular shows that don't have them

- AI-powered discovery: Ask questions to find shows and episodes (this feature does send queries to a 3rd party API, and also uses anonymized analytics while we work out the prompts)

- Audio-guided tutorials: Interactive walkthroughs with voice guidance and visual cues

The basics work well too: Standard playback features, queue management, speed controls, etc.

I'm really interested in feedback—this is more passion project than business right now. I've been dogfooding it as my daily podcast app for over a year, and I'm open to exploring making it a business if people find it valuable. Curious if there are unmet needs that a privacy-focused, open web approach could address.

miloignis 10 hours ago

Very cool - played around with it, and it seems quite featured, and my test podcast worked!

I really appreciate the local-first, self-contained but very portable architecture, with an optional server connection to handle CORS and index and whatnot; that's a really solid approach.

Hopefully this isn't too annoying, but I saw you open-sourced what looks like the backend, do you have any plans/interest to open-source the front end as well, for people who might want to self-host?

  • aegrumet 10 hours ago

    Yay! And not at all annoying. No plans to open-source the frontend at this stage but I'll keep the request in mind. Btw, that backend was part of an earlier abandoned infrastructure attempt. Still cool code imo, but no longer running on it.

kethinov 10 hours ago

Any plans to make an Electron or Tauri version?

Also personally I do not prefer to play podcasts with a podcast app. I just want it to download the files to a directory which I then sync with another audio player. Does your app make that workflow easy?

  • aegrumet 10 hours ago

    Not at the moment but I've been meaning to dig into stuff like this.

    Fun sidenote, what you're describing is how the first podcast apps worked back in the day!

sdotdev 8 hours ago

love how frictionless the site is, really good ux other devs should take note

hoistbypetard 10 hours ago

I haven't tried it yet, but that's a great choice of name! Well done.

phildini 13 hours ago

This is super cool and I love the idea of keeping the data and AI local.

  • aegrumet 12 hours ago

    Thanks! Also, to be transparent, the chatbot uses a third party hosted API. Just updated the post to reflect that. There are actually models that can run in a browser, but last time I checked they were pretty heavy to run.

jcul 10 hours ago

This is actually pretty amazing, definitely the most impressive pwa I've ever seen.

It took me about 3 minutes to add to my home screen, export a opml from pocket casts and import it to whatever.

Having offline downloads, ability to adjust playback speed etc is really cool too.

Nice work!

I'm on my phone now, so I'm curious to see how it looks on a browser. Obviously syncing of podcasts / listening positions is not going to work, by design?

The AI search is actually kind of cool for discovering podcasts too, I kind of rolled my eyes a bit when I read it, but it actually worked ok for a query I tried, and I do find it difficult to find new podcasts.

  • aegrumet 10 hours ago

    Nice, thanks!

    > Obviously syncing of podcasts / listening positions is not going to work, by design?

    Not sure, can you say more? Quick potential answers in the meantime.

    For syncing, there's an auto-sync that runs in the background and prioritizes the shows that you've listened to most in the past month, but eventually cycles through all podcasts that you follow. There's also a manual sync on the Following page.

    For listening positions, there's a Queue where you can drag individual episodes up and down to change the order, and playback will automatically cycle to the next episode in the queue when the playing episode finishes.

  • aegrumet 10 hours ago

    Ah, just realized you might be talking about syncing state between devices. Definitely haven't tackled that, as there's no coordinating server in the architecture at this point. But I did recently add "beaming", which lets you quickly transfer your subscription lists between devices with a QR code backed by an ephemeral, signed link.

  • aegrumet 8 hours ago

    When open in the browser, try some vi navigation keys :-)

wedrawmonsters 12 hours ago

First website in months that hasn't made me immediately angry with cookie popups and email list signup nonsense. I love it.

khana 8 hours ago

[dead]