The Sound Library Podcast
In today’s episode, we dig into a problem that’s both technical and philosophical: why iOS still doesn’t offer a real API for Voice Memos — and why that matters more than you might think. Inspired by a [https://soundlibrary.substack.com/p/memokit-the-api-we-desperately-need]Sound Library [https://soundlibrary.substack.com/p/memokit-the-api-we-desperately-need] deep-dive, we explore the limitations developers face when building apps that organize and manage user recordings. [https://soundlibrary.substack.com/p/memokit-the-api-we-desperately-need] For years, third-party developers have been able to build rich apps around iOS Photos because Apple provides PhotoKit — a comprehensive, privacy-preserving API that lets apps index, query, and work with a user’s photo library programmatically. In contrast, Voice Memos sits behind a wall: there’s no equivalent framework that lets developers automatically fetch recordings. The files live in a protected part of the system (/private/var/mobile/Media/Recordings/), inaccessible without manual user action. We explain that this isn’t a simple oversight — it’s the result of Apple’s design choices. Over 16 years, despite loads of requests and clear utility for productivity tools, Apple has never prioritized opening up a Memos API. Unlike photos, voice recordings aren’t seen as a “social” or user-central asset, so there’s little incentive to provide robust programmatic access. So what is MemoKit — or what could it be? In this podcast, we explore the blog from the creators of Sound Library App [https://www.parlamusic.com/]. The creators imagines an API like “MemosKit” that would let developers request authorization, fetch recordings by metadata, and build powerful organization features — all without manual import workflows. Instead, developers must rely on workarounds like using the iOS share sheet or document picker to import files one at a time. In today’s conversation, we unpack: * The real limitations of iOS sandboxing and why Voice Memos has stayed closed for so long. * The contrast with PhotoKit and what Apple does provide for other media types. * How developers are coping today with import workarounds. * Why a MemoKit-style API would be a game-changer for productivity and organization apps. Whether you’re an app creator frustrated by platform limits or just curious about how developer ecosystems evolve, this episode sheds light on a silent gap in the iOS experience — and what it tells us about Apple’s approach to APIs. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit soundlibrary.substack.com [https://soundlibrary.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
6 episodios
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