

Music player with integrated podcast clientįreemium podcast client for Apple Watch, iPad, and iPhoneĪndroid, iOS, macOS, watchOS, Web, Windowsįree podcast player for mobile, desktop and webĭefault music management application for GNOMEĪndroid, iOS, Windows, Web, PlayStation 4, PlayStation 5, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/SĬross-platform multimedia player and framework, includes podcast functionalityĪ podcast client designed for Elementary OSĬommercial audio player with free Lite option, supports podcasts Media organizers with integrated podcast client News aggregator for online news feeds, features podcast support Open source podcast client written in Python using GTK+īroadcast, podcast and streaming radio platform developed by iHeartMedia Simple podcast client developed for GNOME desktop environment Versatile audio player with separate podcast client component Podcast software developed by Apple, built into Apple devicesīroadcast, Internet radio and podcast platformĪ podcast distribution network and playerĪndroid music player with podcast directory and podcast support.Ī simple, lightweight minimalistic podcast app

Apple Podcasts is currently included in all Apple devices, such as iPhone, iPad and Mac computers. Podcasts were made popular when Apple added podcatching to its iTunes software and iPod portable media player in June 2005. The core concepts had been developing since 2000, the first commercial podcast client software was developed in 2001. Although many include a directory of high-profile podcasts, they generally allow users to manually subscribe directly to a feed by providing the URL. Some of these podcast clients can also automate the transfer of received audio files to a portable media player. While podcast clients are best known for streaming and downloading podcasts, many are also capable of downloading video, newsfeeds, text, and pictures. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.Ī podcast client, or podcatcher, is a computer program used to stream or download podcasts, usually via an RSS or XML feed. This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness.
