What data are you sending to the audio player? Are you able to play it manually, or is just the autoplay failing to work? It seems from the error message like the data the audio player is being asked to process something it cannot process.

The AudioPlayer interface provides directives and requests for streaming audio and monitoring playback progression. Your skill can send directives to start and stop the playback. The Alexa service sends your skill AudioPlayer requests to give you information about the playback state, such as when the track is nearly finished, or when playback starts and stops. Alexa also sends PlaybackController requests in response to hardware buttons, such as on a remote control or the next and previous tap controls on Alexa-enabled devices with a screen.


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The AudioPlayer interface includes the following directives responses and request types. You include the directives in a response to Alexa to start and stop an audio stream. Alexa sends the requests to notify your skill about changes to the playback state.

Send Alexa a request to stream the audio file identified by the specified audioItem. Use the playBehavior parameter to indicate whether to play the stream immediately or to add the stream to the queue. Add the Play directive in your response to Alexa. Include the directive in the directives array in your response.

An object with two fields, content and type. Use these fields to provide captions for the associated audio attachment on any compatible device with a screen. A captionData object doesn't exist until it's provided with content and type. Devices assert support for AudioPlayer version 1.1 or later through the Capabilities API.

The audioItem.stream.expectedPreviousToken property is required if playBehavior is ENQUEUE to handle situations in which requests to progress through a playlist and change tracks happen at the same time. The value of audioItem.stream.expectedPreviousToken should match the audioItem.stream.token property provided with the previous stream.

Clears the audio playback queue. You can set this directive to clear the queue without stopping the currently playing stream, or clear the queue and stop any currently playing stream. Include the directive in the directives array in your response.

Sent when Alexa begins playing the audio stream previously sent in a Play directive. This request lets your skill verify that playback started successfully. Also, Alexa sends this request to notify your skill when Alexa resumes playback after pausing it for a voice request.

This request is also sent if the user makes a voice request to Alexa, since this temporarily pauses the playback. In this case, the playback begins automatically once the voice interaction is complete.If playback stops because the audio stream comes to an end on its own, Alexa sends PlaybackFinished instead of PlaybackStopped.

To progress through a playlist of audio streams, respond to this request with a Play directive for the next stream and set playBehavior to ENQUEUE or REPLACE_ENQUEUED. This adds the new stream to the queue without stopping the current playback. Alexa begins streaming the new audio item once the currently playing track finishes.

I'm into my music big time and have some quality IEM (earbuds) use an external DAC dongle and to top it off I use the USB Audio Player Pro app to bypass the Android "soundcard" to get true audio from Tidal.

USB Audio... is an amazing app that works on all your Android devices to bypass the lower quality Samsung etc sound output from your phone and plays true audio from the sources from your local Lossless music and it also hooks up to your Tidal and Qobuz accounts to provide you with true audio direct to you great headphones with a USB DAC dongle or similar DAC device.

But different audio plays on each browser: Chrome for Windows is about 4 seconds late, Chrome for Android seems spot-on, Mobile Safari is off. (Even VLC has this issue when playing the file.) If playback starts from the beginning of the file, they stay in sync.

When the bit rate is not constant, browsers seek to different segments of audio given the same timestamp. The algorithm to seek is simple for constant bit rate, but is more complex for variable bit rate (and often involves some form of estimation); I couldn't find a definition of this operation in the HTML standard, so it's unsurprising different browsers implement this differently.

I have been working on a jquery plugin that uses a HTML5 audio player () to play back mp3's. I noticed that in various browsers multiple GET requests were made for the same MP3 file when the audio player was loaded.

In the case of Firefox, three requests are made for audio. This is to support playback regions and seeking of media files that aren't downloaded yet. It's essentially downloading the file and determining it's duration in three chunks. The following was given as an explanation when this behavior was reported to Mozilla as a bug:

The MBX-PRE Streaming Audio Player is designed to offer a simple-to-install and simple-to-configure streaming media solution to add high quality streaming audio content to any audio system. The MBX-PRE can be used as a single stereo audio streaming source for a single room, or supply a single audio stream to a larger whole-house system through its easy-to-use analog line-level/digital (coax/optical) outputs.

The MBX-PRE allows for expansion to up to 32 streaming rooms of audio in a single installation with any combination of other MBX-Series streaming products from Russound. When paired with a Russound multi-room controller, system expansion is possible up to 8 independent audio sources and up to 48 total rooms of audio.

by the way, while I have you on the thread. is it possible to make the background color in a different color? And enlarge the player a bit? Understand if this is too much to ask a helping friend. Just ignore the message in that case.

With Storybutton, your little ones gain free access to an extensive library of children's audiobooks, podcasts, stories, and more. Delight in the discovery of new tales and timeless classics, all available to stream at no extra cost.

Normally when I play a mp3 file its in the my files app, which just loads a simple inapp player. I can't even select a different app to open my files, as soon as I hit "open with", it starts up Spotify. I have Google music I stalled but that's been disabled for a long time, that's about it.

Okay. So I uninstalled any apps that were listed as capable of playing MP3s. And now MP3s play in the files app. I think the MP3 player in the files app is just there so you have something to play them with if you don't have anything else that can. I don't know why they chose to do it this way, but.. it seems you're stuck with it auto-opening Spotify unless you have a dedicated app for playing MP3s.

So yeah. Unfortunately I think the only 'fix' for this is installing another app that will play MP3s. I'd recommend VLC if you just want something that can play a bunch of audio (and video) formats. It's open source as well. Otherwise you may want to go with Google Music or Samsung Music as I believe they allow you to sort MP3s into playlists.

So I have an S21 running Android 12, and I noticed earlier this week that instead of playing MP3 files through the default media player, my phone started using Spotify. I don't know about you guys, but Spotify won't let me play any of my mp3 files. I tried uninstalling Spotify, which let me use the default player, but as soon as I reinstalled it the issue started happening again. Does anyone have a fix for this? It's getting annoying. 2351a5e196

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