Posts Tagged ‘radio’

Project Model

Thursday, August 20th, 2009

I have created a project model to help highlight its benefits above the standard radio model. I have simplified the current radio model, which essentially broadcasts content and music to the listener, without any ability for them to have any direct input or interaction over the content/music they listen to. ALPHACAST allows for direct feedback into the music the listener hears, and also the ability to share content via social networks.

Project Model

THE PROBLEM WITH THE BROADCAST MODEL

Saturday, May 2nd, 2009

The broadcast model is essentially a centralised distribution model. It is one that dominated media distribution throughout the 20th century. Radio was, and still is, the original broadcast medium. At its heart, the broadcast model produces content from a central location to a large number of receivers (listeners in the case of radio, viewers in the case of television).

Radio content by its nature has a strictly linear structure, which offers little or no control to listeners. This was all well and good during the analogue age, where users were subject to the authority of content producers. However, the Internet, [...]

COMMERCIAL RADIO IN DECLINE

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

I had been keeping an eye out for articles relating to the Guardian Changing Media Summit which took place in march, and was far beyond my budget to attend(about £340!). According to this article on the media guardian website, commercial radio is ‘dying out’. It even has a rather doomsday-esque warning that it could be gone within 15 years. This is based upon the declining advertising revenues in the commercial radio sector. Commcercial radio is, as the name suggests, entirely dependant on advertising/sponsorship to fund its operations. Advertisers are being tempted by the benefits of online advertising, such as more [...]

BBC STREAMS NOT ON-DEMAND

Sunday, April 26th, 2009

I have suffered a bit of a setback, due to the fact that the streams the BBC offer are not compatible with flash. I contacted James Cridland, who is the head of future media & technology at the BBC (formerly head of digital at Virgin Radio). James writes a regular blog on the radio industry which is fascinating, I urge anyone who has even a mild interest in radio to have a read. Anyway, he kindly got back to me and explained that the BBC only provide two external links to their streams, .asx to play in windows media player, [...]

RADIO METADATA

Friday, April 24th, 2009

I have been fiddling around with uk radio station metadata. I started my efforts with the radio station i spent my year on placement, Absolute Radio (formerly Virgin Radio). I have to hand it to Absolute Radio, they are deffinitely the frontrunners in terms of online radio streaming. They use icecast audio streaming, and provide on-demand metadata for their three stations. For example, they typically send the station name, station genre, a url and more importantly the currently playing track. This makes building an app for their station a joy, as you can connect to the server over a socket [...]

BRIDGING THE GAP

Thursday, April 2nd, 2009

Well, my idea for my final project has shifted radically since my last musings. I originally was looking into peer to peer radio, however, i was never really comfortable with this idea, firstly as it was potentially beyond my skill and secondly it just didn’t POP enough. In the course of my dissertation research I covered many areas in which Internet culture has influenced the radio listener of today.

A topic that came up which really interested me was the effect of customised music (think last.fm, pandora and personal music players) on music discovery. Once upon a time this would have [...]