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Internet Radio
built 640 days ago
"Another key success of internet talk radio is our ability to archive shows by topic or date, for listening on demand 24/7." "Radio on demand," as Lee calls it, has proved to be a big hit with the listeners. Over 95% of the total listeners on her network do so via the archives. Over the years, wsRadio has compiled more than 12,000 audio archives.
Since 2006 THE INTERNET RADIO NETWORK has been your 'One Stop Shop' to listen to America's most popular Radio Shows online! To listen click on the speaker icon next to each host's name. Once there look for the "Listen Live" icon and click on it to listen to your favorite show. Also, at the bottom of the page there are important emails, maps, and interesting links you might enjoy including a "Video Blog". All shows are free... you may need to download either WINDOW'S MEDIA PLAYER , REAL PLAYER or QUICKTIME to listen.
Frontier Silicon has secured over ten design wins to date for its Venice 6 Wi-Fi radio solution with leading brands including Roberts Radio and Grundig, marking a significant entry into the emerging stand-alone Internet radio receiver market. Designs using the module include portable and alarm clock radios, CD micro systems, and HiFi tuners, and are expected in the shops by November 2007.
Click Here for RAIN Radio! Click the blue arrow [N]ext to the issue date above to read the following RAIN news stories from yesterday's issue: (1) Internet radio growing surprisingly slowly, Arbitron webcast ratings suggest. (2) RIAA CEO Hilary Rosen discusses interactivity and Napster with RAIN (Part 2 of 2). (3) Xenote folds. (4) RIAA and OSU call in police on student for sharing MP3s.
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SaveNetRadio.org Miller said that it’s in the best interest of the artists, record labels and Internet radio operators for the emerging industry to grow. “Because if it grows, everyone wins,” he said. “If you kill it, nobody wins.”
One of the most common ways to distribute internet radio is via streaming technology using a lossy audio codec. Popular streaming audio formats include MP3, Ogg Vorbis, Windows Media Audio, RealAudio and HE-AAC (sometimes called aacPlus). The bits are "streamed" (transported) over the network in TCP or UDP packets, then reassembled and played within about 2-10 seconds, depending on server characteristics. This delay is referred to as lag time.
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