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Buying Radio Time? Read This and Don't Waste Your Money
Buying radio? First off, let me say, I'm not knocking it. But read on and see how to use it to your best advantage. If you've been in a direct-to-consumer business for even 6 months, or are listed in the phone book, you've probably been pitched...
iTunes tops 200 million downloads, Partners with Satellite Radio
It seems that Apple is in talks with Sirius Satellite Radio to make their streaming broadcasts available on the iPod. This is something that a lot of online music fans have been looking forward to for some time. Satellite radio customers love the...
Making Internet Radio Work
When I was 13 years old there was a movie that came out that literally changed my life. It was 1973 and the movie was American Graffitti. I quickly fell in love with the music and the 50's subculture and 30 some years later I still haven't shaken...
Podcasting: Internet Radio On Demand... and MORE!
If you haven't heard the term "podcast" yet, you will. It's about to blow the world of online audio through the roof as every Tom, Dick and Shirley can now operate a high powered Internet Radio station providing on-demand audio (and shortly,...
Talk Radio: Chest Thumpers Anonymous
State of of radio airwaves
Monthly I pay for multiple cable television channels and still can’t find anything to watch. I’ve grown tired of the reruns, syndications, and the plastic-faced pundits slinging words like “appeaser”, “traitor”, and...
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EFF Comments in FCC "Cognitive Radio" Proceeding
EFF this week filed comments (PDF) in the FCC's "Cognitive Radio" proceeding (ET Docket No. 03108) asking the Commission to answer empirically the question of what spectrum is actually in use (as opposed to simply allocated to a licensee), and to uphold its duty under the First Amendment by creating opportunities for flexible, software-defined radios to thrive on open hardware and in open systems.
"Radios built on PCs present unique enforcement challenges for the Commission," said Cory
Doctorow, EFF's European Affairs Coordinator. "But retarding innovation in the hope that its enforcement tools will remain effective is the wrong way to meet these challenges. Instead, the Commission should assume
that our computers will be the basis of open, frequency-agile radios, then determine how best to address the problem of radios that harmfully interfere."
About the author:
Press Release
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