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#21
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In article . com,
"junius" wrote: This thread has been an interesting lesson in perspective, huh? When we the shortwave group heard that Amy loved "foreign radio stations", I think we all naturally thought that she had in mind the sort of programming that we in this group tend to enjoy: Radio Netherlands, V. of Vietnam, Radio Transoxiana...or take your pick. I don't think that NYC top 40 stations came to mind, although I suppose that, given the existence of an international boundary between NYC and her location in Canada, such stations are "foreign radio". In any case, given the sort of thing that she's wanting to receive, there are probably better options out there for her than shortwave radio, even if there is the chance that she might in some odd instances stumble across a transmission of the type of music that she enjoys. Also, her interest is exclusively in the music...and, let's face it, if she has even a remotely discriminating ear, then the type of audio quality that can be expected with a shortwave transmission is likely going to disappoint. Sure, we in this group love shortwave, and many of us enjoy listening to music over this medium, despite its very audible limitations. I thought she wanted broadcasts in French for her husband. "My husband is from France and he too is dying with the radio." "I am, however, very interested in the Sony ICF-SW7600GR." "We will only be looking to pick up major NY and major France stations, no obscure stuff." Based on these quotes and by golly the fact that she posted in rec.radio.shortwave, I would make the assumption that she is actually interested in short wave reception. Now I know it will be a novel concept to some that posting here indicates an actual interest in short wave but its true! You are supposed to post news and information germane to the news group. This might be a hard fact for the satellite Trolls to swallow but that is how Usenet is supposed to work. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#22
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In article .com,
"Amy" wrote: Guys, my head is reeling! I also posted this question on an Apple forum (I am a mac user) and I too have been sent to Short Wave by them. But we are looking to ROCK THE HOUSE and feel like we are home again. The broadcasts need to be clear. I am in Montreal, so the NYC stations are not far. It's the France ones that will be harder. we are specifically looking to hear live broadcasts from our respective hometown stations, not just good music but the feeling of being home too (we've been here 11 years, you'd think we'd be over it by now!). I am fearing my best bet is to just do it through the computer via the internet. My hesitation is just over-using my Powerbook which is vital to my job. Maybe I can buy a cheap second hand computer or laptop to hook up the internet to the stereo speakers... Sorry for misunderstanding what you wanted. You were sent to the wrong place unless you are interested in broadcast band or short wave listening. You have two choices other than short wave and that is XM, Sirius satellite or streaming Internet. Why are you afraid of Internet streaming? You have OSX and it multitasks no problem so you can work and stream at the same time. That is what I do. Do you have a low bandwidth connection? Why don't you use Itunes radio? Maybe they don't have what you want? How about this streaming link http://www.440.com/440satx.html Another streaming link http://www.live365.com/stations/easye12 To find radio station links use this. If the station has a web page this will find it and you can go there looking for a stream link. http://radio-locator.com/ Music on the Internet http://www.netradio.com/ -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#23
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![]() "David" wrote in message ... On 26 Apr 2006 12:47:42 -0700, "junius" wrote: Telamon wrote: In Amy's case, since her listening interests are more mainstream, satellite radio does offer some of what she's wanting: you can find the top-40 content; the content of Sirius's French-language music channels might disappoint, though, since I believe it's primarily music by French Canadian artists. BBC Radio 1 plays a lot of Euro stuff. But not FRENCH pop oldies, which is most of what Nostalgie plays. |
#24
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You bet! And not just in high school!
Joe |
#26
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![]() "Joe Analssandrini" wrote in message oups.com... Oh yes it is! Joe "Oh yes" what is? |
#27
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On Thu, 27 Apr 2006 18:22:43 GMT, "David Eduardo"
wrote: "Joe Analssandrini" wrote in message roups.com... Oh yes it is! Joe "Oh yes" what is? Oh my God am I here all alone... |
#28
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![]() "David" wrote in message ... On 26 Apr 2006 13:55:32 -0700, "Amy" wrote: Guys, my head is reeling! I also posted this question on an Apple forum (I am a mac user) and I too have been sent to Short Wave by them. But we are looking to ROCK THE HOUSE and feel like we are home again. The broadcasts need to be clear. I am in Montreal, so the NYC stations are not far. It's the France ones that will be harder. we are specifically looking to hear live broadcasts from our respective hometown stations, not just good music but the feeling of being home too (we've been here 11 years, you'd think we'd be over it by now!). I am fearing my best bet is to just do it through the computer via the internet. My hesitation is just over-using my Powerbook which is vital to my job. Maybe I can buy a cheap second hand computer or laptop to hook up the internet to the stereo speakers... These tune selected internet radio stations and require no computer. http://www.rokulabs.com/products/soundbridge/index.php That looks like an excellent suggestion for Amy and her partner's musical interests, technical capabilities and desire for pretty good stereo quality. Many Internet 'radio' stations stream at 128 kbps and can sound quite decent. If dropouts due to network congestion have not been a problem on the Mac, then they should not be with this radio-like appliance. Tom |
#29
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On Thu, 27 Apr 2006 20:33:48 -0400, "Tom Holden"
wrote: These tune selected internet radio stations and require no computer. http://www.rokulabs.com/products/soundbridge/index.php That looks like an excellent suggestion for Amy and her partner's musical interests, technical capabilities and desire for pretty good stereo quality. Many Internet 'radio' stations stream at 128 kbps and can sound quite decent. If dropouts due to network congestion have not been a problem on the Mac, then they should not be with this radio-like appliance. Tom Only downside I see is that they don't tune to RA or WMA, just MP-3 stations. |
#30
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"David" wrote in message
... Only downside I see is that they don't tune to RA or WMA, just MP-3 stations. According to http://www.rokulabs.com/products/selectionguide.php, they support: MP3 AAC WMA and DRM10 WAV / AIFF but there are restrictions in the current software - see http://www.rokulabs.com/support/internetradio.php - including WMA Voice format used by BBC World Service (future support planned) and nothing other than http streaming. Seems to work with iTunes. |
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