Like thus:
---
<https://www.some.url/>; 2020-07-30
Yadda-yadda-yadda
---
I also try to do the same -- minus the Markdown -- in file comments whenever I change system files.
]]>I find the command line quicker and easier with ffmpeg, but admittedly there is a learning curve.
There is also a "forgetting curve" that I suffer from! If I don't use a command for a few months I forget the exact syntax. So, I now have a text file I call "tips" that I put such things into.
]]>Well, actually these are audio books that I download from youtube, then strip off the audo. They are on my shared directory and I often listen from my Android tablet. So far I haven't found anything on Android that will remember my place in an audio file. This is rather an intermediate solution until I do.
Android Audiobook app does that. Interface is a little awkward on a tablet as it is designed for a phone screen - I have it installed for my wife to listen to Agatha Christie books. You have to drag up from the bottom of the screen to get to the play item - just need to fiddle a bit but it works. Not sure if it will work from a network location as blurb says local device only.
]]>If the latter then smplayer does a great job as it saves your place with any file it plays.
]]>ffmpeg -i infile.mp3 -map 0 -f segment -segment_time seconds -c copy outfile%03d.mp3
where seconds is the length of each segment you want. the %03d adds 3 digit sequential numbers after the outfile name.
There may be easier or more controllable methods but this does work. The main difficulty is that the last word of the out put file may be cut and continued to the next file.
]]>