Daniel sent us this one — he's been doing a big organizational clean-out, and he stumbled on a dead MP3 player that got him thinking. The core question is whether anyone still makes a decent dedicated audio player in what he calls the "iPod of yesteryear" form factor, something that can handle podcast RSS feeds and maybe music streaming, but deliberately strips out everything else. No email, no browser, no notifications. The anti-distraction device.
Oh, this is a genuinely good question. And the timing is actually interesting, because we're in this weird moment where the dedicated audio player market has both collapsed and quietly resurged. It's a tale of two completely different markets.
The phoenix that rose from the ashes of the iPod Classic.
So let me lay out the landscape. The short answer is yes, these things exist, and they fall into roughly three buckets. Bucket one is what I'd call the audiophile digital audio players — companies like Fiio, Astell and Kern, Sony's Walkman line, Shanling, Hiby. These are alive and well. Bucket two is the retro-budget stuff — Sandisk still technically makes the Clip series, there's a whole ecosystem of cheap no-name players on Amazon. And bucket three is what I think Daniel is actually looking for, which is almost a third category — the repurposed minimalist Android device.
Let's unpack those, but start with the problem he's actually trying to solve. It's not just "I want an MP3 player." It's "I want a device that plays podcasts, syncs via RSS, and does as close to nothing else as possible, because my phone is a distraction machine and I know myself.
And that self-knowledge is the key part here. He's not asking for a better phone. He's asking for a worse phone that's better at being one thing.
The musical equivalent of a typewriter in a room with no wifi.
That's exactly the framing. So let's talk about the audiophile players first, because that's where the real product development has happened. Fiio has a whole line — the M series, the M11, M15, M17. Astell and Kern makes players that cost more than a MacBook. The Sony NW-ZX series. These things are gorgeous pieces of hardware, machined aluminum, high-end DAC chips, balanced outputs. And here's what matters for this prompt — almost all of them run some flavor of Android.
Which is the Trojan horse problem. If it runs Android, it can run Gmail.
That's the tension. Most of these players run a skinned, locked-down Android — no Play Store by default on many of them, or a curated app store. Fiio's players, for example, ship with a whitelisted set of apps. You get Tidal, you get Spotify, you get podcast apps like Pocket Casts or AntennaPod. But you don't get Chrome. You don't get Gmail. You don't get the Play Store unless you deliberately sideload it.
Does the OS fight you if you try to make it do more?
In some cases, yes. The Fiio M6, which is their entry-level model — about a hundred and fifty dollars — runs a heavily modified Android that's basically locked to music and podcast apps. The screen is small, the processor is modest, and even if you wanted to browse the web on it, you'd hate the experience. Which is actually the feature.
It's distraction-proof by being terrible at distractions.
And that's a legitimate design philosophy. The Hiby R3 series takes this even further — it runs a proprietary Linux-based OS, not Android at all. No app store. It does music playback, it can do Bluetooth, it has a digital output, but it cannot run anything you didn't intend it to run.
That sounds closer to what Daniel's describing. But does it handle podcast RSS feeds?
This is where it gets tricky. The super-locked-down non-Android players — the Hiby R3, the Shanling M0 Pro, some of the ultra-budget stuff — they typically don't have a native podcast app with RSS subscription support. They'll play MP3 files you load onto a micro SD card, but they won't pull down new episodes over wifi. You'd be back to the manual sync workflow Daniel described — download on a computer, transfer to the card, swap it in.
Which he floated as an idea, but then immediately identified the friction. He wants something that updates itself and tracks what he's listened to.
So that pushes us toward the Android-based players, where you can install a proper podcast app. And this is where I think the sweet spot for his use case actually lives. Something like the Fiio M6 or the Sony NW-A306 — these run Android, they connect to wifi, they have Bluetooth, they can run Pocket Casts or AntennaPod or Podcast Addict. The podcast app handles the RSS feeds, the download queue, the play tracking, the sync across devices if you want that. But because these aren't phones, the operating system isn't nagging you. There's no notification shade full of alerts. The screen is small enough that typing is annoying. The whole device is oriented around one thing.
The lo-fi girl of portable electronics.
I'm going to sit with that one for a second. It's a device that knows what it is and isn't trying to be anything else.
Let me push on the practical side. Daniel mentioned Bluetooth audio sync, maybe a digital output. What's the actual connectivity on these things?
On the current generation, it's pretty solid. The Fiio M6 has two-way Bluetooth — it can receive and transmit — so you can use it with wireless earbuds or speakers. It has a USB-C port that doubles as a digital audio output, which means you can connect it to an external DAC or a speaker system that takes USB audio. It also has a standard three-point-five millimeter headphone jack, which at this point is practically a political statement.
Herman Poppleberry, defender of the headphone jack.
I'll wear that badge. The Sony NW-A306 is similar — Bluetooth five-point-oh, USB-C with digital out, headphone jack. The screen is three-point-six inches, which is tiny by phone standards. It runs Android thirteen, believe it or not, but Sony's custom launcher makes it feel like a Walkman, not a phone. You can install podcast apps from the Play Store. And Sony claims about thirty-six hours of playback on a charge if you're using wired headphones, which drops with Bluetooth and wifi, but you're still getting through a week of heavy podcast listening.
Thirty-six hours is substantial. What's the storage situation?
The Sony has thirty-two gigabytes internal, expandable via micro SD. The Fiio M6 has no internal storage of note — it's all micro SD. But micro SD cards are cheap and enormous now. You can put a one-terabyte card in these things and carry every podcast episode ever produced.
Until you lose the card in a couch cushion and your entire audio library vanishes into the upholstery dimension.
That's a risk with any physical media. But the upside is you're not streaming over cellular, you're downloading on wifi and playing locally. No data caps, no dead zones.
Let's talk about the budget end, because Daniel didn't say he wants to spend audiophile money on this experiment.
The Fiio M6 is about a hundred and fifty dollars. The Sony NW-A306 is around three fifty. Those are the mid-range. But there's also the Sandisk Clip Sport Plus, which is about sixty dollars. It's tiny, it has a clip — the name delivers — it has Bluetooth, it has a micro SD slot, and it runs Sandisk's own simple OS. No Android, no apps. But here's the catch — it doesn't do podcast RSS natively. You'd have to sync files manually.
Which defeats the purpose he outlined.
There's a workaround — some podcast apps on a computer can auto-sync to a mounted SD card, like a scripted solution. But that's more tinkering than he probably wants.
The real answer seems to be: these devices exist, they're called digital audio players or DAPs, and the ones that meet his spec are the Android-based models from Fiio, Sony, Hiby, and Shanling, with the caveat that he's going to want to deliberately choose one where the Android implementation is locked down enough that installing a web browser is either impossible or sufficiently painful to serve as a deterrent.
That's the summary. But I want to dig into the philosophy here, because I think there's something bigger going on. Daniel's prompt is really about intentional single-purpose computing, and we're seeing a small but real resurgence of that.
The convergence pendulum swinging back.
For about fifteen years, the story was convergence — everything into the smartphone. And it worked. The smartphone camera destroyed the point-and-shoot market. The smartphone GPS destroyed the dedicated sat-nav market. But what didn't die were the things where "good enough" wasn't actually good enough, or where the very capability of the smartphone became the problem.
The smartphone is a camera, but it's also a portal to Twitter. The smartphone is a music player, but it's also pinging you with Slack notifications. The tool and the distraction live in the same glass rectangle.
So we're seeing this countermovement. People buying dedicated e-readers because reading on a phone means fighting every other app for attention. People buying dedicated music players because streaming on a phone means the algorithm is watching you and the notifications are interrupting. The distraction-free device becomes a luxury good.
Like adopting a feral cat.
I'm not sure I follow the analogy, but I trust it's going somewhere.
You're deliberately choosing something less domesticated, less convenient, because the inconvenience is the feature. The friction is what you're buying.
Okay, that does track. And with these DAPs, the friction is intentional. You're not going to impulse-check Instagram on a Fiio M6. The screen is too small, the processor is too slow, and the browser — if it even has one — is a miserable experience.
The other thing Daniel mentioned that I want to circle back to is the play-tracking problem. He wants to know what he's listened to, and he wants new episodes to appear without him manually managing files. That's an RSS problem, and it's actually the hardest part of this spec.
And it's why I think the solution has to be software-defined, not hardware-defined. The hardware exists — any of these Android DAPs can do it. The question is which podcast app he uses and how he configures it.
What would you recommend?
For this use case, I'd say AntennaPod. It's open source, it's lightweight, it handles RSS feeds directly, it has auto-download and auto-delete options, and it doesn't have any of the algorithmic recommendation cruft that something like Spotify or even Pocket Casts has built in. You subscribe to a feed, it downloads new episodes on wifi, it tracks what you've played, and it can be set to delete episodes after you've listened to them.
The workflow would be: pick up the device, open AntennaPod, see the new episodes that downloaded overnight, listen, and when you're done the episode auto-deletes or marks itself played. No computer involved, no SD card swapping.
And if he wanted to get fancy, he could set up something like Audiobookshelf, which is a self-hosted podcast server that gives you your own private RSS feeds with cross-device sync. But that's veering into homelab territory, and I think the prompt is asking for simplicity.
Simplicity and constraint. The whole point is to have fewer options, not more.
And that brings me to something I want to flag about the current market. There's a category of device that almost fits this spec but has a fundamental problem — the so-called "Android music players" you find on Amazon for forty or fifty dollars from brands like AGPTEK or Luoran. These run ancient versions of Android, often without the Play Store, and the build quality is abysmal. The Bluetooth chips are unreliable, the batteries degrade after months, and the software is janky. I cannot recommend them. They're the MP3 player equivalent of those "smart" light bulbs that phone home to a server in Shenzhen that went offline three years ago.
The digital equivalent of a gas station sandwich.
You're on a roll today. If you're going to do this, spend the hundred and fifty to three hundred dollars and get something from a company that actually supports its products. Fiio, Sony, Shanling, Hiby — these companies release firmware updates. They have user communities. The devices hold their value reasonably well.
If he wants to go even more minimalist — no Android at all, just pure audio — what's the trade-off?
Then you're looking at something like the Shanling M0 Pro, which is about a hundred and ten dollars. It's tiny — smaller than a credit card. It has a touchscreen, it plays basically every audio format, it has Bluetooth, it has USB-C with digital out. But it does not have wifi. So you're back to the manual sync model. You'd download podcast episodes on a computer, transfer them via USB or micro SD, and the device would play them in order.
Which is what Daniel was describing with his "pop in the SD card, sync done" idea.
And for some people, that workflow is actually preferable. It creates a deliberate ritual. You sit down once a week, you curate what you're going to listen to, you load it onto the device, and then you're offline. No temptation to check for new episodes mid-listen, no endless scrolling through a feed.
The podcast equivalent of meal prepping.
That's a useful way to think about it. And the Shanling M0 Pro, or the Hiby R3二代, which also lacks wifi in its base configuration — these are excellent audio players. The DAC chips in these things outperform what's in most smartphones. If you're listening on good headphones or a decent speaker, you'll notice the difference.
Let's talk about the second part of Daniel's spec — the Bluetooth and digital output requirements. He mentioned wanting to connect to speakers.
All the devices I've named support Bluetooth, and the current generation uses Bluetooth five-point-oh or better, which means solid range and support for higher-quality codecs like LDAC and aptX HD. The digital output via USB-C means you can connect to an external DAC or a powered speaker system that takes USB audio directly. That's a feature that didn't exist on the iPods of yesteryear — you were stuck with the headphone jack or the thirty-pin connector.
The iPod didn't have Bluetooth until relatively late in its life.
The iPod Touch did, but the Classic never got it. The iPod Classic was the last great single-purpose audio device from a major company, and Apple killed it in twenty-fourteen. The used market for iPod Classics is actually still active — people mod them with solid-state storage and new batteries — but they'll never do RSS or Bluetooth without significant hacking.
That's not the answer here. The answer is a modern DAP from a company that's still making them.
And I want to name one more option that's interesting but slightly different — the Light Phone. It's not an audio player per se, it's a minimalist phone. But the Light Phone two has a music player and a podcast tool, and it deliberately has no web browser, no email, no social media. It's an e-ink screen, it's designed to be as boring as possible. The catch is it doesn't have a podcast app with full RSS subscription management — it's more of a basic player. And it's three hundred dollars for something that's primarily a phone.
It's adjacent but not quite the thing. Okay, so if I'm Daniel and I'm making a purchase decision after this conversation, what am I buying?
I'd say the Fiio M6 is the closest match to his spec at a reasonable price. It's around a hundred and fifty dollars. It runs a locked-down Android that doesn't invite distraction. You can install AntennaPod or Pocket Casts from Fiio's curated app store. It has Bluetooth, USB-C digital out, a headphone jack, and a micro SD slot. The screen is small and low-resolution enough that you won't want to do anything on it except navigate your audio library. And Fiio has been in this game for years — they're not going to disappear tomorrow.
The Sony NW-A306 as the upgrade pick?
Yes, if budget allows. Three hundred and fifty dollars gets you a better screen, better build quality, better battery life, and Sony's audio processing, which is good. It runs a fuller version of Android, so you'd want to be more disciplined about what you install. But the hardware is lovely, and it feels like a premium product in a way that scratches the same itch the iPod Classic did.
The "this is a beautiful object I want to hold" factor.
And I think that matters. Part of what Daniel's describing is a desire for a device that feels intentional. When you pick up a dedicated audio player, you're making a choice: I am now going to listen to something. When you pick up a phone, you're just... picking up your phone. It's the default state of modern existence.
The phone is the digital equivalent of ambient noise. The dedicated player is the act of putting on headphones and saying "I'm doing this now.
And there's research that backs this up — not specifically about audio players, but about context and attention. When a device can do many things, your brain keeps a portion of its attention allocated to all of those possibilities, even when you're only using one. It's called attentional residue. You finish reading an email, you switch to a podcast, but part of your brain is still half-expecting another email.
The single-purpose device isn't just about removing temptation. It's about allowing full cognitive engagement with the one thing you're doing.
And that's why I think Daniel's instinct here is correct, even if the market hasn't perfectly served this need. The devices exist, they're just not marketed as "anti-distraction podcast players." They're marketed as "high-resolution audio players for audiophiles." But the hardware is the same.
It's a positioning problem, not a product problem.
If someone made a device that was explicitly "the podcast player — does RSS, does Bluetooth, does nothing else, costs a hundred bucks," I think they'd sell a surprising number of units. But the market is small, and the smartphone has eaten most of it.
The smartphone ate the world, and now we're picking through its stomach contents looking for the bits we actually wanted.
That's a vivid image. The dedicated GPS is gone. The point-and-shoot camera is mostly gone. The MP3 player is almost gone, but it's hanging on in this niche — audiophiles who want high-end DACs, and people like Daniel who want to escape their phone.
What about the used market? If someone wanted to spend less than a hundred dollars?
Used iPod Touches are available, but they're just iPhones without the cellular modem — same distractions. Used Fiio or Sony players hold their value reasonably well, but you can find an M6 for under a hundred if you're patient. The challenge is that this category of device doesn't depreciate the way phones do, because there's no carrier subsidy and no two-year upgrade cycle. People buy them and keep them.
Which is actually a good sign for the product category. If people aren't upgrading every year, it means the thing does its job.
A good DAP from twenty-twenty is still a good DAP today. The audio formats haven't changed, Bluetooth hasn't changed in ways that break backward compatibility, and an RSS feed is an RSS feed. This is the anti-obsolescence category.
To answer the prompt directly: yes, these devices exist. They're called digital audio players or DAPs. The ones that handle podcast RSS feeds without manual syncing are the Android-based models from Fiio, Sony, Hiby, and Shanling. The budget pick is the Fiio M6 at about a hundred and fifty dollars. The premium pick is the Sony NW-A306 at about three fifty. Install AntennaPod, connect to wifi, subscribe to the My Weird Prompts RSS feed, and you've got a dedicated podcast machine that won't ping you about email.
If you want to go fully offline with manual syncing, the Shanling M0 Pro or the Hiby R3 are excellent choices around a hundred to a hundred and fifty dollars. But you lose the automatic RSS updates.
One thing we haven't addressed — Daniel mentioned Spotify in his spec. Does the Fiio M6 handle Spotify?
It does, through Fiio's app store. But here's the thing — Spotify is not a podcast app. It's a music streaming service that also hosts podcasts, and its podcast features are mediocre. No RSS import, no fine-grained download controls, and the interface mixes podcasts and music in ways that make library management frustrating. If the goal is podcasts specifically, a dedicated podcast app is the way to go.
Use the Fiio for Spotify music if you want, but keep the podcast listening in AntennaPod or Pocket Casts.
And that separation is actually useful for the anti-distraction goal. Different apps for different modes. You open the podcast app when you want podcasts. You open Spotify when you want music. There's no algorithmic feed trying to guess what you want next.
The algorithm as the ultimate distraction.
The algorithm is designed to keep you engaged, not to help you finish what you came to do. That's the fundamental tension. A podcast app that just shows you your subscribed feeds in chronological order is the antidote to that.
I want to zoom out for a second. Daniel mentioned that the thing that made his cleaning project work was putting on My Weird Prompts to occupy his brain while his hands were busy. That's a specific use case — audio as cognitive scaffolding for physical tasks.
There's good research on this. Mild cognitive load from audio — a podcast, an audiobook — can actually improve performance on repetitive physical tasks by preventing the mind from wandering. It's not that the podcast makes you better at cleaning. It's that the podcast prevents the part of your brain that would otherwise say "this is boring, let's check email" from derailing you.
The podcast is doing double duty. It's entertainment, and it's also an attentional anchor.
And a dedicated device amplifies that effect, because there's no competing stimulus. The phone isn't buzzing. The screen isn't lighting up with a notification. The only thing happening is the audio.
Which brings us back to the core insight of Daniel's prompt. The phone is too capable to be a good podcast player for someone who struggles with distraction. The solution isn't more self-discipline. It's a device that makes discipline unnecessary.
Environmental design over willpower. It's the same principle as not keeping junk food in the house. If the temptation isn't there, you don't have to resist it.
A hundred and fifty dollars for a device that removes the temptation to check email, browse Twitter, read the news, and do everything else a phone can do — that's actually cheap, if you value your attention.
The attention economy has made our attention expensive. Spending money to protect it is rational.
Alright, let's wrap with a practical summary for anyone in the same boat. What's the shopping list?
First, decide whether you need automatic RSS downloads or you're okay with manual syncing. If you want automatic, get an Android-based DAP. The Fiio M6 is the value pick — about a hundred and fifty dollars. The Sony NW-A306 is the premium pick — about three fifty. Both have Bluetooth, USB-C digital out, headphone jacks, and micro SD expansion. Install AntennaPod for podcasts. Optionally install Spotify or Tidal for music. Do not install anything else.
If you're okay with manual syncing?
Shanling M0 Pro, about a hundred and ten dollars. Or the Hiby R3, similar price. These have better audio hardware than the Android players at the same price point, but no wifi and no apps. You'll download episodes on a computer and transfer them via USB or micro SD. It's more work, but it's also more intentional.
The thing to absolutely avoid?
The no-name Android players on Amazon for under fifty dollars. Bad software, bad build quality, bad Bluetooth. They'll frustrate you more than they'll help you.
There it is. The dedicated podcast player exists. It's not called a podcast player — it's called a digital audio player, and it's marketed to people who care about FLAC files and DAC chips. But it does exactly what Daniel wants, and with the right app, it becomes the anti-distraction podcast machine.
If anyone listening knows of a company actually making a purpose-built podcast device — RSS, Bluetooth, nothing else — tell us. Because that's a product we'd love to see.
Now: Hilbert's daily fun fact.
Hilbert: In the late Victorian period, a British colonial administrator stationed in Vanuatu drafted an official report on the island's natural resources using ink derived from horseshoe crab blood, chosen because the administrator believed — incorrectly — that its distinctive blue color would deter document forgers. The report still exists in the Vanuatu National Archives, and the ink has faded to a pale teal.
Blue ink as an anti-forgery measure. That's a level of confidence in ink I didn't know existed.
That's the administrative equivalent of a ghost.
This has been My Weird Prompts. Thanks to our producer Hilbert Flumingtop, and thank you for listening. If you enjoyed this episode, leave us a review wherever you get your podcasts — it helps other people find the show.
Find more episodes at myweirdprompts dot com. We'll be back with a new prompt soon.