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| Author |
Message |
| 25 new of 210 responses total. |
lumen
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response 125 of 210:
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Oct 30 00:37 UTC 1998 |
I hope you're using Netscape? Internet Explorer sucks.
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keesan
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response 126 of 210:
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Dec 27 01:48 UTC 1999 |
We were treated to an evening of laptop classical music. In addition to the
few classical stations that broadcast (Yahoo has links to six of them, two
of which are Internet only, and these do not include WKAR, Seattle or London),
there is now something called netradio (www.netradio.com) which stays in
business by selling the CD's it plays, and claims 120 channels. Some are not
yet working (Baroque is broke) but we found about four classical stations:
piano, symphony, chamber, and easy listening, plus a classical talk channel.
And a host of genres I had never even heard of before, plus Native American.
I don't recall anything ethnic apart from this. We also managed to find the
Macedonian National Anthem (with a bad translation).
I wonder if you can at least read this site with lynx.
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keesan
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response 127 of 210:
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Dec 27 02:10 UTC 1999 |
You can read about Lalo, see the list of genres, and see instructions to look
at the list above (it is below, with lynx) or to the left (it is below), but
to purchase a CD your browser must accept cookies (lynx does not). They have
Holiday Music in several genres.
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goose
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response 128 of 210:
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Dec 28 02:05 UTC 1999 |
Was on eof those station WCPE?
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keesan
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response 129 of 210:
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Dec 29 21:45 UTC 1999 |
Yes. WCPE Raleigh NC, WFMR Milwaukee, WFMT Chicago, WRR Dallas, KRTS Houson
(why K not W?), also internet only Diskjockey and Operadio.
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goose
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response 130 of 210:
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Dec 30 01:47 UTC 1999 |
K west of the Mississippi River, W East of it. (With a few exceptions for very
old callsigns)
There was a good article about WCPE in the Jan issue of Monitoring Times.
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hematite
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response 131 of 210:
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Dec 31 07:40 UTC 1999 |
(Such as KDKA in Pittsburgh Pa, and surrounding vicinity)
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bruin
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response 132 of 210:
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Dec 31 17:56 UTC 1999 |
And how about the radio & TV stations who have three letters in their call
sign rather than the usual four?
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gull
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response 133 of 210:
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Dec 31 22:03 UTC 1999 |
I think the three-letter radio stations were the original "clear channel"
stations, like WJR. They were originally the only station on their
frequency, though that's not true any more, and most of them still don't
have to cut power at night.
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dbratman
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response 134 of 210:
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Jan 3 18:38 UTC 2000 |
3-letter stations tend to be older ones; at some point fairly early on
the FCC started expecting 4-letter signs but let the existing 3-letter
ones remain. There was not, I believe, any specific relationship
between number of letters and type of station.
Some versions of lynx do accept cookies.
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gull
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response 135 of 210:
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Jan 3 19:46 UTC 2000 |
As far as I know, though, no current version of lynx saves them from session
to session.
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keesan
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response 136 of 210:
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Apr 17 03:24 UTC 2000 |
We now have RealAudio going at Kiwanis. Why is it that some stations sound
weaker than others? What causes the long breaks? Do some stations allow more
people to use them at once? I had much better luck connecting to Bulgaria
and Turkey than to US stations Saturday evening. Eastern Europe was about
4 am and people were probably sleeping. Do you really need 16M RAM to run
RealAudio and if not, why was I told on a computer with 8M RAM that I had
insufficient bandwidth? (same speed computer as the one that works).
What versions of Netscape does RealAudio work with? Do you need an older
version for older Netscapes?
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rcurl
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response 137 of 210:
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Apr 17 05:00 UTC 2000 |
I can't answer all your questions, but the long breaks occur because
all the packets needed for continuity have not arrived yet. The system
stockpiles them so that there are enough, in order, to give you a
reasonable piece of music.
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orinoco
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response 138 of 210:
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Apr 17 09:25 UTC 2000 |
...and the problem with 8M RAM may be that RealAudio then can't stockpile as
many packets-worth of music as it would like to.
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keesan
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response 139 of 210:
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Apr 18 16:39 UTC 2000 |
Is this 'buffering' and 'network congestion'? We will try with 16M RAM
and the old version of RealAudio that came with bruin's computer when he gave
it to me.
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rcurl
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response 140 of 210:
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Apr 18 18:28 UTC 2000 |
It is 'buffering', done because of 'network congestion'. Incidentally,
the packets may (will) arrive out of order normally, because of the
processes for maximizing network capacity by continually rerouting them.
So you can get hung up because just one packet went "round the barn".
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keesan
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response 141 of 210:
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Apr 28 16:37 UTC 2000 |
I have been trying out RealAudio Player 3 and 4 for Win31. As promised, 3
works with 8M RAM and 4 with 16M. But most of the sites I try to listen at
say that they require a newer version, or G2, or that they cannot play files
of type vnd.rn-realaudio (and Netscape cannot find a plugin for this). Would
5.0 do any better? The later versions are only for Win95 or later. So far
I have managed to listened to one station from Chile (with a lot of network
congestion but good classical music) and one from the Czech Republic (very
fine quality reception but loud American pop music). Netradio.com never works
even on our Win96 computer with RealAudio 7 - why? How many different formats
are being broadcast? One station offered Windows Media or Realplayer 5 (it
would not do 4). I am tired of experimenting - has anyone compared 4 and 5?
All RealAudio talks about is improvements in the video. It works without MS
Video for WIndows if you don't mind frequent messages.
(4 does not work with 8M RAM, there is a message about bandwidth).
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keesan
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response 142 of 210:
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May 1 14:30 UTC 2000 |
RealAudio says to try version 5.0 but did not say whether it will play the
files that 4.0 will not. They give very short answers.
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keesan
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response 143 of 210:
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May 4 14:08 UTC 2000 |
WITR said Version 5 would work, but Real Audio keeps giving me error messages
and crashing Netscape. I did get WKAR working, very clearly.
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keesan
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response 144 of 210:
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May 4 16:57 UTC 2000 |
classicalwebcast.com is a very nice listing of about 50 classical stations
around the world, including Estonia, Korea, and Bulgaria, with clear
indication of whether you need Windows Media Player (for Win95 only), G2
(Win95) or 16K (etc. up to over 50K) mono or stereo. (WKAR does not need G2
and they listed it as G2). For my hardware (16M RAM) and software (RealPlayer
5) I have had the best luck with lower fidelity mono broadcasts (found one 8K,
many 15 or 16K and 20K). Seattle KING works but with a lot of gaps in the
sound while buffering. More RAM would probably fix this. Clicking on 16K
mono takes you right to the broadcast, or you can click on the station name
for its home page. I got Adelaide Australia (unlistenable quality), tried
to get Radio Bartok (timed out, busy), and crashed on Czech Radio 3, which
is classical, as is Croatian Radio 3. Another time I got Czech Radio 3,
classical, jazz, ethnic, etc., and got some American popular tune of the
forties (is this ethnic?).
We will probably set up one FreeBSD (UNIX) computer with Netscape and
Realaudio for Linux and lots of RAM. Is there a Windows Media Player for
Linux? (Is there a RealAudio for Linux?)
People have been complaining recently that my phone is busy all day.
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keesan
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response 145 of 210:
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May 6 23:40 UTC 2000 |
Peter Ribbens, who runs this site, tells me that WKAR broadcasts FM in G2 and
AM in something that I can hear with version 5. That explains why it was all
talk. Some of the file compression and other messages may result from my
using Win31 and not Win95, rather than dependent on the version of RealPlayer.
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dbratman
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response 146 of 210:
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May 8 23:53 UTC 2000 |
I have yet to try listening to radio on the web. After reading the
account of sound quality in post #144, I feel disinclined to try.
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keesan
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response 147 of 210:
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May 21 12:49 UTC 2000 |
Some stations have much better quality than others, and the statistics for
them reveal 100% of the signal was received either when due, or soon enough
afterwarsd for buffering to make up for that. The really bad ones lose what
sounds like 50%. Probably listening to stations that broadcast at rates more
than 20K, with a modem faster than 28K, would improve overall quality. Many
of the stations broadcast at two or more rates, for people with modems or
direct connects (up to 128K), in mono or stereo.
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keesan
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response 148 of 210:
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May 21 12:53 UTC 2000 |
RealPlayer 7 basic is available for Win 95 or later, Mac 8, Solaris 2.6, or
Linux 2.0. Does Linux come with a free dialer, or are there shareware dialers
for it? Not much point in trying to listen with Win31/Shiva.
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scott
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response 149 of 210:
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May 21 14:35 UTC 2000 |
Linux does indeed include a dialer.
(Linux doesn't have networking as an add-on like DOS and Win 3x. It's all
part of the basic package)
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