If you more into Android and streaming, you could take a look at the
Hiby M300
which is also a budget device, but has a pretty modern Android and is a bit more portable than a smartphone.
Maybe it's also worth mentioning Qobuz (https://www.qobuz.com/), the high res music streaming service. Many audiophiles are into this, while I'm not using streaming services at all.
I personally use an old iPod Nano 7g and as backup device my Android phone with Substreamer / DSub and self hosted navidrome. Not hi-res, I don't need this :-)
> Tangara is a portable music player. It outputs high-quality sound through a 3.5 mm headphone jack or Bluetooth, has great battery life, and includes a processor that’s powerful enough to support any audio format you can throw at it. It’s also 100% open hardware running open-source software, which makes it easy to customize, repair, and upgrade
If you are really into good quality audio, I'd recommend a used
It's really good, but even used about 450 bucks. This might be too pricey, so you could then go for a like already recommended (https://www.rockbox.org/wiki/AIGOErosQK). It has no balanced output, but is about 120 bucks and supports Rockbox.If you more into Android and streaming, you could take a look at the
which is also a budget device, but has a pretty modern Android and is a bit more portable than a smartphone.Maybe it's also worth mentioning Qobuz (https://www.qobuz.com/), the high res music streaming service. Many audiophiles are into this, while I'm not using streaming services at all.
I personally use an old iPod Nano 7g and as backup device my Android phone with Substreamer / DSub and self hosted navidrome. Not hi-res, I don't need this :-)
another ($250) option is https://www.crowdsupply.com/cool-tech-zone/tangara
> Tangara is a portable music player. It outputs high-quality sound through a 3.5 mm headphone jack or Bluetooth, has great battery life, and includes a processor that’s powerful enough to support any audio format you can throw at it. It’s also 100% open hardware running open-source software, which makes it easy to customize, repair, and upgrade
Do you carry a smart phone?
If yes, then this:
https://f-droid.org/en/packages/ch.blinkenlights.android.van...
will play flac from your phones local storage (you have to transfer the files to the phone of course).
similarly, apps such as pulsar in the android play store support playing audio files (incl flac) from storage
If you want a new device, these are not too expensive and well supported by Rockbox: https://www.rockbox.org/wiki/AIGOErosQK
Or get a used iPod. That's what I did.