If it were, it would be one hell of a placebo effect. What I'm describing isn't necessarily faster download speed. It's the difference between a fully functional program and a barely functioning one. The normal Subsonic app on Android has not worked great for me in the past six months. Often when buffering, it would just skip to the next track, making the listening experience a nuisance compared to how it used to be. And the buffering became a lot more erratic, instead of just buffering at the start of the song and playing normally from then, my Subsonic app would buffer at the start, play for a little bit, buffer again, play for a little bit, buffer again, etc. even if I have constant internet connection. I had zero idea there were other apps for Subsonic so I downloaded Dsub yesterday and everything seriously works just as well as my Subsonic used to work, if not even better. I drove around listening to music and it didn't pause or stop once, which is very satisfactory performance-wise. I can't remember the last time my Subsonic worked so fluently.
Well the buffering and stopping isn't actually
I'm not sure who you're replying to. So if I understand you correctly, you're saying it's not a placebo effect and you coded the program to have less pauses in playback? Or are you saying it isn't actually faster than the default Subsonic app?
Either way, I'm convinced at the very least the Android version of Subsonic is buggy (while Dsub isn't). People have reported the issue I'm having with the Subsonic app as far back as January (
http://forum.subsonic.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=15080&p=66809&hilit=skipping+android#p66809)and never got any help.