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7 votes
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Poolside FM: Transport yourself to 1980's Miami
13 votes -
Radio Paradise: Listener supported, commercial free internet radio
9 votes -
What are your favorite community radio stations?
I'm a big fan of community radio, freeform if I'm being picky. I'm curious... Which stations are my fellow Tilderinos listening to? (I'm particularly interested in non-English speaking stations)...
I'm a big fan of community radio, freeform if I'm being picky. I'm curious...
- Which stations are my fellow Tilderinos listening to? (I'm particularly interested in non-English speaking stations)
- How are you listening?
- More generally, are people even listening to much radio any more? If not, why is that?
To get things started, my own answers are.
- WFMU, dublab, Resonance FM, rrr.
- Generally I set up an alias per station with fish shell and stream each link via cvlc
- As I'm posting I guess it's obvious but yes, I listen to the radio almost daily. It's a nice break to have one less thing to make a decision about (what to listen to) while avoiding having to listen to top 40 and discovering all sorts of new music I'd otherwise likely miss out on.
8 votes -
Broken cable damages Arecibo Radio Observatory
12 votes -
Christopher Eccleston returns to Doctor Who - Big Finish
15 votes -
My dad launched the quest to find alien intelligence. It changed astronomy
9 votes -
The Big Dig jazz show - episode 12: Troubled Waters
3 votes -
A No. 1 hit vanished from Poland’s charts. It’s not going quietly
14 votes -
The Big Dig Jazz Show episode 11: Vocal Distancing
5 votes -
The Big Dig jazz show, episode 10: Large and In Charge (Big Band Sounds)
7 votes -
Long-lost US military satellite found by amateur radio operator
9 votes -
The Big Dig jazz show episode 9 - "newish" jazz
5 votes -
The Big Dig jazz show, episode 8 - Quarantine Workflow Edition
9 votes -
Playing on Kansas City radio: Russian propaganda
9 votes -
[SOLVED] Some of my internet radio stations aren't playing on my computer
EDIT: The problem has been solved. @Sill identified the problem here and @cfabbro found a work-around here. Crisis averted! I listen to some internet radio stations on my computer, but a couple of...
EDIT: The problem has been solved. @Sill identified the problem here and @cfabbro found a work-around here. Crisis averted!
I listen to some internet radio stations on my computer, but a couple of them aren't working any more: they appear to play, but there's no sound coming from my computer's speakers.
It is only two stations. I've tested other internet radio stations I listen to, and they still work: I can hear them. I can play and hear YouTube videos. I can stream Spotify on my computer. I can play and hear my music files stored on my computer's hard drive. So I know my speakers work. I know Chrome works as a music player for other sources, including other internet radio stations. It's just these two radio stations.
One of them is this radio station. Also this radio station. I know their digital streams are working, because I can listen to them via an internet radio app on my phone. So I know their digital signals are being sent out. But, while my phone app can play them, my computer browser can't play them.
I've tested both non-working stations in Chrome and Internet Explorer. They both don't work in Chrome, but this station also doesn't work in IE.
I'm using Chrome 80.0.3987.122. And I'm running Windows 7.
This problem only started a couple of days ago.
What's going on? How do I fix this?
12 votes -
The Big Dig jazz show, episode 7: The Spy Who Funked Me
3 votes -
The pirate radio broadcaster who occupied Alcatraz and terrified the FBI
11 votes -
Environmental activist, Greta Thunberg is to appear as one of the Christmas guest editors of Radio 4's Today programme
6 votes -
Inside the Ethics Committee
Inside the Ethics Committee is a BBC Radio 4 programme. They describe it like this: Joan Bakewell is joined by a panel of experts to wrestle with the ethics arising from a real-life medical case....
Inside the Ethics Committee is a BBC Radio 4 programme. They describe it like this:
Joan Bakewell is joined by a panel of experts to wrestle with the ethics arising from a real-life medical case.
Each episode is chaired by Bakewell, with a range of different experts (who all sit on hospital ethics committees), talking about the ethical difficulties faced by healthcare professionals (and the organisations they work for) in different real life cases.
Some of it hasn't aged very well - there's an episode about HIV testing an unconscious patient after a needle-stick injury. With advances in treatment and reductions in stigma I think would have made it a very different programme today.
But most of it is pretty good, and explains in detail how some decisions are made.
For example: https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b0643x61
Ashley is 14 years old when doctors discover a brain tumour. Tests reveal that it's highly treatable; there's a 95% chance of cure if he has a course of radiotherapy.
Ashley begins the treatment but he has to wear a mask which makes him very anxious and the radiotherapy itself makes him sick. He finds it increasingly difficult to bear and he starts to miss his sessions.
Despite patchy treatment Ashley's cancer goes into remission. He and his mother are thrilled but a routine follow-up scan a few months later shows that the cancer has returned.
Ashley is adamant that he will not have the chemotherapy that is recommended this time. He threatens that he will run away if treatment is forced on him. Although Ashley is only 15 he is 6'2" and restraining him would not be easy.
Should the medical team and his mother persuade him to have the chemotherapy? Or should they accept his decision, even though he is only 15?
5 votes -
Standard for light-based wireless internet connectivity (LiFi) provides emerging alternative to cramped radio bands employed by WiFi and cellular
8 votes -
Internet Public Radio: Cheb Gero - Anti Apartheid (30 June 2019)
3 votes -
Any hams around?
So, I am far from the most experienced, or the most knowledgeable, or the most active amateur radio operator out there, but it is something that has piqued my interest none the less. Before I got...
So, I am far from the most experienced, or the most knowledgeable, or the most active amateur radio operator out there, but it is something that has piqued my interest none the less. Before I got into the hobby, I always assumed that the FCC just game amateurs a small bucket of useless spectrum and that was it. Maybe you could fly an RC plane, but surely that is about as cool as it gets.
It turns out I was dead wrong. Amateurs are allocated bands all across the RF spectrum - more or less. Bands from way below the AM broadcast frequency to way above the microwave frequencies used by our cell phones and wireless routers. Also, you are allowed to legally transmit at up to 1.5 kilowatts of power! That's 3,000 times as much power as your average walkie talkie! :) Also, importantly, the license exam only costs $15.
At many of the lower frequencies, the signals bounce off the ionosphere and you can make contact with people all over the world (propagation gods permitting). At the higher frequencies, you lose that "skip propagation," but more bandwidth is available. There are analog voice repeater networks, digital packet networks, mesh networks running on modified commercial WiFi gear, and even a handful of old school packet BBSes. There are some LEO satellites which run voice repeaters which allow you make international contacts, and sometimes even the International Space Station will participate in events. Lots of cool stuff going on. This hobby is kind of a bottomless rabbit hole of possibilities.
I got my technician license about a year ago, and I have been most interested in the data networking end of the hobby. Despite being a pile of hacks, APRS is still very cool, and sometime soon I hope to set up an AREDN node of my own. Every once in a while I'll call into the local repeaters and shoot the breeze.
So there's my story. Are there any other hams out there?
25 votes -
The disco invention that changed pop music: The twelve-inch single
8 votes -
Entrance is free: meet the St Petersburg community redefining the DIY music scene
4 votes -
With a second repeating radio burst, astronomers close in on an explanation
7 votes -
Red Bull Music Academy and Radio to shut down
7 votes -
A job for the boys
7 votes -
Local news is dying, but the large majority of Americans think it's doing well
8 votes -
Do you realize you're homeless?
8 votes -
Are the lyrics to "Baby, It's Cold Outside" now too inappropriate for radio?
23 votes -
The great silence
6 votes -
'Journalism while brown': Why Sunny Dhillon quit The Globe and Mail
6 votes -
How the daughter of an African revolutionary learned about racism in a Canadian playground
9 votes -
The shuffle: London's new jazz
5 votes -
The Big Dig jazz show episode 4: Hammers and Keys (featuring great jazz pianists)
8 votes -
Police body cameras are hackable and policy lags behind, warns security analyst
6 votes -
Why computer science students are demanding more ethics classes
22 votes -
Ghosts of 'OZ
5 votes -
The Big Dig jazz show episode 3: a look at jazz standards
11 votes -
How a surrogate twin pregnancy turned into a custody battle over unrelated babies
6 votes -
We can't grow enough food to feed the world according to the Food Guide
12 votes -
How a law meant to curb infanticide was used to abandon teens
13 votes -
When a Music Legend Dies, How Does Today’s Mostly Automated Radio React?
8 votes -
'Losing Earth': Do we have a collective moral responsibility to fight climate change?
7 votes -
Why tracking 'hate incidents' that don't break the law is crucial to tackling rise in hate crimes
9 votes -
Like a car aerial: Tuning in from the quietest place on the planet. In the extreme hush of the WA desert, a tiny team of scientists is engaged in an experiment of cosmic proportions.
4 votes -
The cult of Aphex Twin
8 votes -
Best Kept Secret in Podcasting/Radio - Filmically Perfect
4 votes -
Anybody here interested in ham/amateur radio?
I was wondering if there's anybody here who's interested in ham/amateur radio. I'm somewhat interested in it myself, and am planning on getting a BaoFeng BF-F8HP soon as my first radio, as well as...
I was wondering if there's anybody here who's interested in ham/amateur radio. I'm somewhat interested in it myself, and am planning on getting a BaoFeng BF-F8HP soon as my first radio, as well as a Tech (or maybe even General) license.
12 votes