A library that tends itself
Over 5,400 lectures gathered into one place — with a smart library that downloads what is next, clears out what you have heard, and always keeps something ready offline.
Listening to a lecture by Śrīla Prabhupāda is a pleasure. Getting the lectures is not. They are scattered — some on torrents, some on VK, some in Telegram. You download them, put them somewhere, and drown in nameless files. And when you want a particular lecture, good luck: no search, no sorting, no way to tell what you have already heard.
We gathered it all into one place and made it humane.
The collection
The app now holds more than 5,400 lectures by Śrīla Prabhupāda — around 3,800 in English and over 1,600 in Russian — on Śrīmad-Bhāgavatam (over 1,500), Bhagavad-gītā (over 800), the Caitanya-caritāmṛta, the Nectar of Devotion, Śrī Īśopaniṣad, and other books. With proper search, sorting, and a mark for what you have heard.
But we went further.
A smart library that looks after your phone
- It downloads new lectures — in the right order, and exactly as many as needed. Your storage does not fill up. You set how big a reserve to keep, from half an hour up to ten hours of unlistened audio, and a background loop keeps the queue topped up to that target.
- It clears out what you have finished — listened lectures are archived out of the rotation after a delay you choose, so fresh ones take their place.
- It always keeps a reserve — so there is something to listen to even with no connection.
Nothing to search for, nothing to download by hand. You open the app, and you listen.
Part of
Lectorium